Daily Mail

Roast dinner and all the microplast­ic trimmings...

230,000 pieces found in one meal

- By Colin Fernandez Environmen­t Editor

IT’S a meal families traditiona­lly enjoy tucking into at Sunday lunchtime.

But experts have now found that a roast dinner can contain a staggering 230,000 microplast­ic particles.

Researcher­s said eating a similar meal every day would result in swallowing the equivalent of two plastic bags a year. The study was carried out by Portsmouth University scientists and ITV’s Good Morning Britain.

Microplast­ics are defined as smaller than 5mm long. To see how many find their way into food, GMB reporter Michelle Morrison and her children made two roast dinners with chicken, potatoes, carrots, broccoli and Yorkshire puddings. However, one meal was made with ingredient­s bought wrapped in plastic but the second had been mostly purchased without any plastic packaging. The roast made from ingredient­s wrapped in plastic contained seven times more microplast­ics than the other one.

Experts said this showed that packaging is a major route for plastics getthe ting into our bodies. The nonplastic packaged items also cost 37 per cent less.

Dr Fay Couceiro, an environmen­tal pollution expert at the university, said: ‘It would appear that the majority of microplast­ics in our food come from the plastic packaging it is wrapped in.

‘However, there are other ways that plastic can enter the food chain. It could be getting into the vegetables through the soil or into our meat through grazing.

‘Air has lots of microplast­ics in it too so they could be falling on top of the food. And finally it could be from the cooking utensils used when preparing a meal.’ She added: ‘Usually food samples are analysed for microplast­ics in their raw state under laboratory conditions.

‘This study differs because we chose to look at what was actually on your plate after the food had been cooked.

‘Instead of a sterile laboratory, the food was cooked in a normal kitchen so it is likely microplast­ics will come from a combinatio­n of within the food, the packaging, cooking utensils and the air.’

Miss Morrison said: ‘Previously there has been very little research into the amount of microplast­ics contained within an entire meal.

‘Our new investigat­ion has clearly found that we eat far less microplast­ics when we reduce the amount of packaging we buy. What we now need to know is – are these microplast­ics harmless? Or, like many believe, are they actually tiny plastic timebombs?’

Professor Shaji Sebastian, a gastroente­rology expert at Hull University Teaching Hospitals, said: ‘ The key is to understand, what are microplast­ics doing to the body.

‘Do they go to the organs? For example, do they cross the barrier between the blood and the brain?’

He added: ‘ The results of this investigat­ion are surprising and make research into the impacts of microplast­ics on the human body all the more urgent.’

Tory MP Alberto Costa, chairman of the All-Party Parliament­ary Group on Microplast­ics, said: ‘ We don’t yet know the effect this has on our health, but I would very much welcome more research and investigat­ion.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom