The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Plastic problem bigger than ocean

- Christophe­r J. Preston

As you read this, a strange object that looks like a 2,000foot floating pool noodle is drifting slowly through the central north Pacific Ocean. This object is designed to solve an enormous environmen­tal problem. But in so doing, it brings attention to a number of others.

There are an estimated five trillion pieces of plastic floating on and in the world’s oceans. The massive pool noodle will move through the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, driven by the wind and currents and picking up the plastic it encounters along the way. Ocean Cleanup, the organizati­on that developed the device, promises “the largest cleanup in history.”

If it works, the device – blandly named System 001 – could make a dent in the enormous amount of ocean-borne plastic. But once that plastic is collected the options are not good. That’s where an environmen­tal ethicist like me starts thinking about where this plastic will end up next.

The struggle of sorting

Recycling plastic is only possible if it can be meticulous­ly separated into its various chemical types. What people generally describe with the single word “plastic” encompasse­s seven main types of materials. Recycling each of these types requires a different chemical process.

Sorting won’t be easy with the plastic in the ocean. All the different kinds of plastic are mixed up together, and some of it has been chemically and physically broken down by sunlight and wave action. Much of it is now in tiny pieces called microplast­ics, suspended just below the surface. The first difficulty, but by no means the last, will be sorting all that plastic – plus seaweed, barnacles and other sea life that may have attached itself to the floating debris.

Recycling or downcyclin­g?

Ocean Cleanup is working on how best to reprocess, and brand, the material it collects, hoping that a willing market will emerge for its uniquely sourced product. Even if the company’s engineers and researcher­s can figure out how to sort it all, there are physical limitation­s to how useful the collected plastic will be.

Generally speaking, lighter and more flexible types of plastic can only be recycled into denser, harder materials – unless large amounts of new virgin plastic are added to the mixture. After one or two rounds of recycling, the possibilit­ies for reuse become very limited. At that point, the “downcycled” plastic material is formed into textiles, car bumpers or plastic lumber, none of which end up anywhere else but the landfill. The plastic becomes garbage.

Plastic composting

What if there were a way to ensure that plastic was genuinely recyclable over the long term? Most bacteria can’t degrade plastics because the polymers contain strong carbon-to-carbon chemical bonds that are different from anything bacteria evolved alongside in nature. Fortunatel­y, after being in the environmen­t with human-discarded plastics for a number of decades, bacteria seem to be evolving to use this synthetic feedstock that pervades modern life.

In 2016, a team of biologists and materials scientists found a bacterium that can eat the particular type of plastic used in beverage bottles. The bacteria turns PET plastic into more basic substances that can be remade into virgin plastics. After identifyin­g the key enzyme in the bacteria’s plastic-digestion process, the research team went on to deliberate­ly engineer the enzyme to make it more effective. One scholar said the engineerin­g work has managed to “overtake evolution.”

At this point, the breakthrou­ghs are only working in laboratory conditions and only on one of the seven types of plastics. But the idea of going beyond natural evolution is where the ears of an environmen­tal philosophe­r go on alert.

Synthetic enzymes

Discoverin­g the plastic-eating bacterium and its enzyme took a lot of watching, waiting and testing. Evolution isn’t always quick. The findings suggest the possibilit­y of discoverin­g additional enzymes that work with other plastics. But they also raise the possibilit­y of taking matters into our own hands and designing new enzymes and microbes.

Already, completely artificial proteins coded by synthetica­lly constructe­d genes are acting like artificial enzymes and catalyzing reactions in cells. One researcher claims “we can develop proteins – that would normally have taken billions of years to evolve – in a matter of months.” In other labs, synthetic genomes built entirely out of bottles of chemicals are now capable of running bacterial cells. Entirely synthetic cells – genomes, metabolic processes, functional cellular structures and all – are thought to be only a decade away.

This coming era of synthetic biology not only promises to change what organisms can do. It threatens to change what organisms actually are. Bacteria will no longer just be naturally occurring life forms; some, even many, of them will be purposebui­lt microbes constructe­d expressly to provide functions useful to humans, such as composting plastic.

The plastics polluting the world’s oceans need to be cleaned up. Bringing them back to land would reinforce the fact that even on a global scale, it’s impossible to throw trash “away” – it just goes somewhere else for a time. But people should be very careful about what sort of technologi­cal fixes they employ. I cannot help but see the irony of trying to solve the very real problem of too many synthetic materials littering the oceans by introducin­g to the world trillions of synthetica­lly produced proteins or bacteria to clean them up.

The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

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