Daily Mail

Official probe into plastic found in food

After Mail campaign on microbeads...

- By Sean Poulter Consumer Affairs Editor

A LANDMARK study into whether microplast­ics found in food and drink carry bacteria that threaten human health is to be funded by watchdogs.

Research by universiti­es and the Daily Mail has revealed how bottled water, tap water, beer, sea salt, fish, shellfish, chicken and many other foods are contaminat­ed with tiny pieces of plastic picked up from the environmen­t.

It is believed that harmful bacteria and toxins can be trapped by these plastic particles and could pose a health risk if they are eaten.

But scientists do not yet understand whether this is happening and if it is a risk to human health.

The Food Standards Agency (FSA) has now launched a scientific study to investigat­e these issues. It amounts to a vindicatio­n of the concerns raised by the Daily Mail’s Turn the Tide on Plastic campaign, which has included leading a successful drive to ban microbeads in cosmetics.

One aspect of the research will be to discover whether these microplast­ics carry superbug versions of food poisoning bacteria that are difficult to treat if people fall ill.

Rick Mumford, director of science at the FSA, said: ‘Microplast­ics are a global concern and are persistent contaminan­ts both on land and in our seas. The majority of existing research has focused on their occurrence in the environmen­t and in animals.

‘We want to find out more about the impact of this contaminat­ion on the food chain and how it ends up there, for example, whether microbiolo­gical contaminat­ed microplast­ics in the ocean are eaten by fish and eventually by people.

‘That’s why we’re commission­ing a review to look at existing scientific evidence on the types of micro-organisms that could potentiall­y colonise microplast­ics in the environsca­mpi ment, how they might contaminat­e our food and the potential risk to human health.’

Research for the Daily Mail, published in March, found that cod and salmon sold by eight supermarke­ts was contaminat­ed by airborne microplast­ics.

Previous research from the University of Plymouth found that more than one in three fish caught by trawlers in the English Channel, including cod, haddock and mackerel, contained plastic particles.

And some 83 per cent of Norway lobsters – better known as – caught off the UK coast contained microplast­ics.

In June, a University of Newcastle study estimated that people are consuming about 2,000 tiny pieces of plastic every week, which equates to the weight of a credit card.

An FSA tender document inviting applicatio­ns from scientists to carry out the research highlights existing evidence of mass plastic pollution of the environmen­t and food.

It states: ‘Plastic production will continue to increase over the next ten or 15 years. We are already unable to cope with the amount of plastic waste that is generated. Most is single-use [and] non-biodegrada­ble.

‘It is estimated that only 9 per cent of the nine billion tons of plastic the world has ever produced has been recycled [and] that around 13million tons leak into our oceans each year.’

It says microplast­ics and even smaller particles known as nanoplasti­cs originate from items including beauty scrubs, polyester clothing, food packaging, plastic bottles and bags that break down over time.

The FSA says: ‘Given their small size, they can be easily spread by water, soil and air and can be ingested by a wide range of organisms and in the case of nanoplasti­cs can cross some biological barriers.’

It says research shows that microplast­ics have been found in human faeces, suggesting they can contaminat­e the food chain. Studies also indicate that microplast­ics can help the spread of antimicrob­ial resistant bacteria, or superbugs.

EXPOSED: TOLL OF PLASTIC WE EAT AND BREATHE

From the Mail, March 19

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