The Palm Beach Post

Clean your clothes more sustainabl­y

Laundry is a top source of microplast­ic pollution

- Judith Weis Professor Emerita of Biological Sciences, Rutgers University - Newark | THE CONVERSATI­ON

Microplast­ics are turning up everywhere, from remote mountain tops to deep ocean trenches. They also are in many animals, including humans.

The most common microplast­ics in the environmen­t are microfiber­s – plastic fragments shaped like tiny threads or filaments. Microfiber­s come from many sources, including cigarette butts, fishing nets and ropes, but the biggest source is synthetic fabrics, which constantly shed them.

Textiles shed microfiber­s while they are manufactur­ed, worn and disposed of, but especially when they are washed. A single wash load can release several million microfiber­s. Many factors affect how many fibers are released, including fabric type, mechanical action, detergents, temperatur­e and the duration of the wash cycle.

My research focuses on coastal ecology and water pollution, including work in New York and New Jersey marshes and estuaries that are heavily affected by human activities. Here are some things to know about reducing microplast­ic pollution from your washing machine.

From fabric to water and soil

Once garments release microfiber­s in washing machines, the fibers enter the wastewater stream, which generally goes to a wastewater treatment plant. Advanced treatment plants can remove up to 99% of microfiber­s from water. But because a single laundry load can produce millions of fibers, treated water discharged from the plant still contains a huge number of them.

Microfiber­s that are removed during treatment end up in sewage sludge – a mix of solid materials that is processed to remove pathogens. In many cases, treated sewage sludge is applied to soil as a fertilizer. This allows microfiber­s to enter air and soil, and to be transferre­d to soil organisms and up the terrestria­l food web or taken up by crops.

Microplast­ics that wash into rivers, lakes and bays can have many harmful effects. They may be consumed by fish and other aquatic animals, affecting their biochemist­ry, physiology, reproducti­on, developmen­t or behavior. These microplast­ics contain chemical additives, including substances like phthalates and bisphenol A that can leach out and may have health effects in humans and animals, including effects on the endocrine system.

Textile microfiber­s also contain additional chemicals that have been shown to be toxic, such as fabric dyes, anti-wrinkle agents and flame retardants. In addition, contaminan­ts that are present in the water, such as metals and pesticides, can stick to microplast­ic particles, turning them into a veritable cocktail of contaminan­ts that may be transferre­d into animals that eat them

Washing more sustainabl­y

Not all fabrics shed microfiber­s at the same rate. A loosely woven fabric that feels fluffy or fuzzy, such as fleece, sheds more than a tightly woven one. While garments made of natural fibers, such as cotton and wool, would appear to be a solution, unfortunat­ely they also shed microfiber­s that can pick up pollutants

in the environmen­t.

Some textile scientists and manufactur­ers are developing fabrics that shed less than existing ones, thanks to features such as longer fibers and coatings to reduce shedding. Meanwhile, here are some ways to reduce microfiber shedding from your laundry:

Do laundry less often. Washing full loads instead of partial loads reduces release of microfiber­s because garments are exposed to less friction during the wash cycle.

Use cold water, which releases fewer microfiber­s than hot water.

Use less detergent, which increases microfiber release.

Use a front-loading washing machine, whose tumbling action produces less microfiber release.

Dry laundry on a clotheslin­e. Running clothes in dryers releases additional microfiber­s into the air from the dryer vent.

hhhhhSever­al types of products collect microfiber­s in the washer before they are released with wastewater. Some are laundry bags made of woven monofilame­nt, a single-polyamide filament that does not disintegra­te into fibers. Laundry is washed while enclosed in the bag, which traps microfiber­s that the garments release. A study of one such product, Guppyfrien­d, found that it collected about one-third of released microfiber­s.

Another device, the Cora Ball, is a plastic ball with spines topped with soft plastic discs that capture microfiber­s. It reduces microfiber­s by about 25% to 30%, but may not be suitable for loose knits because it can snag on threads and damage clothing.

Filter your washwater

Several brands of external filters are available that can be retrofitte­d onto existing washing machines. External filters can remove up to 90% of microfiber­s from rinse water. Their average cost is about $150 US. Owners need to clean the filters periodical­ly and dispose of the collected microfiber­s with other solid waste, not down the drain, which would put them back into the wastewater stream.

In a 2021 study, researcher­s installed washing machine filters in 97 homes in a town in Ontario, Canada, which represente­d about 10% of the households in the community. They found that this significan­tly reduced microfiber­s in treated water from the local treatment plant.

Some companies are now manufactur­ing washers with built-in microfiber filters. France has enacted a requiremen­t for all new washing machines to be equipped with filters by 2025, and Australia has announced that filters will be required in commercial and residentia­l washers by 2030.

In the U.S., a similar requiremen­t was passed by the California legislatur­e in 2023, but Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoed the bill, saying he was concerned about the cost to consumers. An economic study commission­ed by Ocean Conservanc­y found that filters would increase the price of washing machines by only $14 to $20 per machine. Several states are considerin­g regulation­s that would require filters in washers.

In my view, requiring manufactur­ers to add filters that can trap microfiber­s to washing machines is a reasonable and affordable step that could rapidly reduce the enormous quantities of microfiber­s in wastewater. The eventual solution will be re-engineered textiles, which won’t shed, but it will take some time to develop them and move them into clothing supply chains. In the meantime, filters are the most effective way to tackle the problem.

Judith Weis is affiliated with. Beyond Plastics, Ocean Conservanc­y.

This article is republishe­d from The Conversati­on under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article here: https://theconvers­ation.com/ laundry-is-a-top-source-of-microplast­ic-pollution-heres-how-to-cleanyour-clothes-more-sustainabl­y-217072

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? A single wash load can release several million microfiber­s.
GETTY IMAGES A single wash load can release several million microfiber­s.
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