breadandcircuses ,
@breadandcircuses@climatejustice.social avatar

It's all around us, everywhere we go, everywhere we look. Many people might assume that it's always been like this. But it hasn't.


Plastic is truly everywhere. In just a few decades, it’s become an inescapable part of modern life, permeating nearly every aspect of our lives, from the food we eat (usually wrapped and bagged in plastic and often containing it) to the clothes we wear (60% of which are made from plastic) to the microplastics hiding just about everywhere, from clouds to human placentas to the Earth’s most remote corners.

“Plastic packaging is definitely a major source of plastic pollution, and it can seem totally overwhelming to folks when they go out to get food, especially since the great majority of our food is wrapped in plastic,” says Erica Cirino of the Plastic Pollution Coalition. “It’s estimated that more than 40% of all plastic produced is single-use plastic packaging, which is an astounding amount.”

Before the advent of plastic packaging, food was packed in a variety of materials, from natural substances such as gourds and leaves to, most recently, glass bottles and jars, metal cans and paper products. Today, plastic encases a large and growing percentage of our food: A recent survey of Canadian grocery stores found that 71% of all produce was packaged in plastic, and that baby food had the highest share of plastic packaging at 76%.

There are a few reasons why so much of our food is packaged in plastic. Perhaps most importantly, it’s cheaper to manufacture and transport than alternatives. And as the world grapples with an urgent energy transition, fossil fuel companies jittery about the prospect of decreasing demand for oil are looking to plastics as their next major profit driver — and are on track to triple global plastic production by 2060.


Read the rest of the article to get the whole story, including the huge amounts of plastic waste we're producing, and the myth of plastic recycling.

FULL ARTICLE -- https://modernfarmer.com/2024/03/foods-big-plastic-problem/

pilgrim76 ,
@pilgrim76@toot.io avatar

@breadandcircuses "Many people might assume that it's always been like this. But it hasn't."

this is the story of our era. things - mostly petroleum and petroleum products, but not entirely - we lived without for eons becoming almost foundational to our way of life within the span of a human generation or two, such that we've forgotten it was ever any other way. it's no wonder we've blundered our way into the disasterous cul-de-sac in which we now find ourselves. we had no time to think.

deightonrobbie ,
@deightonrobbie@mastodon.green avatar

@breadandcircuses A lot of it is quite easily avoidable. In 2012 I lived a year without buying plastics. At the end of the year I had one 60 liter bag full of plastic, but the majority of that was from stuff I still had in the house before I started the challenge. Back then it took a lot of effort sourcing stuff without plastic. It's gotten better now, but I've chosen to balance effort with ease. My household of 2 currently uses about 1/10 the disposable plastics compared to neighbors.

afterconnery ,
@afterconnery@en.osm.town avatar

@breadandcircuses wow. 3 times as much easily breakable garbage to deal with.

kawentzmann ,
@kawentzmann@fairmove.net avatar

@breadandcircuses I remember reading about a time capsule mom and pa store from the 1950s (in Alaska). Inspecting the photos I saw that it had hardly any plastics inside, packaging nor products.

GhostOnTheHalfShell ,
@GhostOnTheHalfShell@masto.ai avatar

@breadandcircuses I take some comfort that nature is already adapting to plastics. Oceanic creatures have started to metabolize it.

In a century or two plastics might just break down wood.. making them cheap storage or construction materials useless.

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