ENVIRONMENT: HOW MUCH PLASTIC ARE WE EATING?
It won’t be wrong to say that we live in a plastic world. Wherever we go, we’ll encounter at least one thing made of plastic. As the pace of our lives quicken over time, we find plastic products more and more useful. Plastic shopping bags allow us to shop on the way, even if we hadn’t planned to, and disposable containers allow us to eat on the move.
“Up until the ’70s, we would have to take a metal or china container or utensil to buy yoghurt and nihari from the vendor because plastic bags did not exist,” reminisces Gohar Ishtiaq, a housewife discussing the good old pre-plastic days. “Groceries would be bought in a cloth bag or woven baskets made of date or coconut palm leaves. Flour was sold in a cloth bag while butchers sold meat wrapped in newspapers.”
With the increase in the use of plastic products globally, its repercussions are also increasing — as at least one third of all plastic products end up polluting the environment. And we produce plastic in substantial amounts. The production rate of plastic is growing exponentially at a rate of four percent per annum and, if things continue this way, there may come a time when the amount of plastic in our environment may exceed that of the flora and fauna.
An average person could be ingesting approximately five grammes of plastic every week
The story of plastic pollution is not a new one. Since plastic is a non-biodegradable material (that is, it can not be decomposed easily), it tends to remain in the environment and act as a pollutant. As tons of plastic gets dumped into the environment, the aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems continue to be devastated. According to a World Wide Fund (WWF) report, around 450 million gallons of untreated industrial waste, including paper, plastic, glass and metal, from industries in cities enters the Arabian Sea every day. Not only does it pollute water and reduce its quality, as a result of associated chemicals, but it also proves to be a direct threat to aquatic life.
Plastic pollution is adversely affecting marine turtles, sea birds and other diverse marine life. Many of the creatures we love, such as whales, dolphins, birds and turtles, die because of plastic pollution. One such example is that of marine turtles, which feed on jellyfish; they may mistake plastic shopping bags as their natural prey and attempt to eat them. When that happens, the bags get stuck in their pharynx and suffocate them, resulting in a slow and painful death.
According to the WWF, by 2025 there will be one metric ton of plastic in the seas for every three tons of fish and, by 2050, there will be more plastic than fish. In terrestrial ecosystems, the soil quality is greatly compromised, while animals can get entangled in plastic bags and suffocate just as in water.
Another aspect of plastic pollution is our food; yes the stuff we eat may contain plastic. New research combining the results of more than 50 studies globally has found that, on average, we could be ingesting about five grammes of plastic every week — equivalent to the weight of a credit card — through the air we breathe, the food we eat and, especially, the water we drink. The report “No Plastic in Nature: Assessing Plastic Ingestion from Nature to People”, based on a study commissioned by the WWF, suggests that people are consuming about 2,000 tiny pieces of plastic every week. That’s approximately 21 grammes a month, just over 250 grammes a year.
The biggest source of ingestion of plastic is water, which comes as no surprise as most of the plastic ever manufactured finds its way to a water body. The degree of contamination fluctuates from area to area, depending on the degree of plastic pollution. For instance, in India, it was found that, on average, there were four microplastic fibres per 500 ml of water that was tested, and 82.4 per cent of the water samples tested were contaminated. The same can be predicted about Pakistan.