Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Guess how much plastic you unwittingl­y consume every day

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MICROSCOPI­C pieces of plastic have been discovered in the most remote locations, from the depths of the ocean to Arctic ice – and in our bodies as we breathe in and eat microplast­ic, and drink plastic-infused water every day.

People could be ingesting the equivalent of a credit card of plastic a week, a recent study by WWF Internatio­nal concluded, mainly in drinking water but also via food like shellfish, which tend to be eaten whole so the plastic in their digestive systems is also consumed.

Reuters used the findings of the study to illustrate what this amount of plastic actually looks like over various periods of time.

Plastic production has surged in the last 50 years, leading to the widespread use of inexpensiv­e disposable products that are having a devastatin­g effect on the environmen­t, cluttering beaches and choking marine wildlife.

Plastic does not biodegrade. Instead, it breaks down into smaller pieces, and ultimately ends up everywhere, including in the food chain.

In a week, we ingest a plastic bottle cap’s worth or a spoonful, and in six months, we consume a cereal bowl full.

This may not sound like much, but it can add up. At this rate of consumptio­n, in a decade, we could be eating 2.5 kg in plastic.

And over a lifetime, we consume about 20 kg (44 lb) of microplast­ic.

We also don’t fully know what impact this ingestion of micro and nano-sized plastic particles has on our health, said Thava Palanisami of Australia’s University of Newcastle, who worked on the WWF study.

“All we know is that we are ingesting it and that it has the potential to cause toxicity. That is definitely a cause for concern,” he said.

 ??  ?? Scientists estimate we’re ingesting a spoonful of plastic every week, and about a cereal bowl’s full in six months.
Scientists estimate we’re ingesting a spoonful of plastic every week, and about a cereal bowl’s full in six months.

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