#673308 - 04/09/08 03:55 PM
Wonder where the oil went???. Check our Ocean!!!
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Mira Trapper
trapper
Registered: 09/17/07
Posts: 689
Loc: Cape Breton Island Nova Scotia
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Long read folks but it certainly is important for us to see the truth of the article and weigh that waste against using natural renewable resources.
FUR COMMISSION USA COMMENTARY, MARCH 14, 2008
Plastic Bags on Our Backs By Teresa Platt, Executive Director, FCUSA
http://www.furcommission.com/resource/perspect999ce.htm
Created in the 1970s as an inexpensive convenience, the plastic bag is now an everyday item with costs that are adding up fast. We use tens of billions of bags a month, or about half a million bags a minute!(1) The vast majority are used only once and end up as litter or in landfills.
Because plastic bags are light and compressible, they constitute only 2% of landfill by volume.(2) The crux of the problem is their mineral origin. While materials, natural and synthetic, that derive from vegetable or animal matter are fully biodegradable, those derived from mineral matter are not. And the origin of the ubiquitous plastic bag is, of course, oil.(3) So they don't biodegrade, and eventually disintegrate into smaller and smaller polymer pieces that can become sources of pollution in their own right as they migrate into the food chain. The plastic bags we use today will be with us virtually forever.(4)
Even more sobering are reports of a massive, swirling dump of debris, mostly plastics, fouling the ocean.(5) Floating "clouds" of waste carried by currents into the "North Pacific subtropical gyre" result in a vortex of flotsam halfway between San Francisco and Hawaii. This was just an interesting phenomenon when the debris was all organic matter in various stages of decomposition. But the modern-day Pacific Garbage Patch, as it is now called, has been growing, along with ocean debris worldwide, tenfold every decade since the 1950s when we started our love affair with the "cheap" convenience of inorganic plastic. The Pacific Garbage Patch is now twice the size of Texas, a 3.5-million-ton soupy mass, 80% of it plastic.(6)
Now such knowledge is hitting us where we shop. In an effort to reduce usage of the common plastic bag, cities from New York to San Francisco and countries from China to Australia have passed laws and regulations to address the problem, experiencing various levels of success.
Ireland, an island country that declared it had run out of landfill space,(7) has been more successful than most. With a young population open to change, Ireland addressed the issue by slapping a tax (equivalent to US 33 cents) on each plastic shopping bag. The result was a stunning 94% reduction in usage within weeks.
Articles lauding this feat featured pictures of happy shoppers pushing carts full of canvas shopping bags - reuseable, biodegradable, recyclable, and made from a renewable resource.
Ironically, these very same eco-friendly shoppers have houses full of plush toys(8) and were wearing synthetic clothing (essentially plastic bags in another form) on their backs. Plastic plush toys, plastic clothing, plastic belts, plastic purses and wallets, plastic stockings, socks and even shoes. Plastic clothing in its many forms does not biodegrade as it too, like the plastic bag, is chemically manufactured from the same non-renewable oil.
And statistics show that little of this form of plastic, plastic clothing, is reused or recycled. One has to ask, is plastic clothing killing us?
The International Herald Tribune commented on Ireland's test case, "Plastic bags became socially unacceptable - on par with wearing a fur coat or not cleaning up after your dog."
The IHT neglected to take the thought much further, ignoring the fact that the alternative to natural fiber fur garments, which it so blithely dissed, is, of course, plastic clothing made from oil. (It also missed the irony that people who do clean up after their dogs, generally use plastic bags!)
Synthetic clothing materials such as eco-fleece, polyester, nylon and pleather (fake leather), and all those fuzzy plush toys, are all just plastic in other forms.(9) In the UK, approximately 90% of clothing is imported and fully 1.5 to 2 million tonnes of clothing waste is generated every year!(10) Of this clothing offal:
63% (1.2 million tonnes) enters the household waste stream going to landfills;
16% (300,000 tonnes) is recovered;(11)
21% is unaccounted for, and assumed to fill the "national wardrobe" - closets and drawers.
Very little fiber - less than 3% - is re-used in the UK.
Volumes of fibers produced, imported or exported for the UK are:
60% synthetic;
29% non-synthetic or natural fibers (of which 15% is cotton).(12)
From these figures we can estimate that 60% of the clothing waste that ends up in British landfills is composed of non-biodegradable synthetics adding up to 720,000 tonnes of waste annually.
But these figures are just for the UK where the population is 60 million souls. The Earth's population is 100 times that. But most of the Earth is full of stalwart fans of natural fibers so it is most likely misleading to extrapolate the UK figure out to the rest of the world. If we did, we'd have 72 million tonnes of plastic clothing waste piling up every year.
Humans have succeeded in a vast manipulation of chemical compounds but we are not all locked into this model, the short-term cheap/long-term expensive plastic clothing culture seen in the UK. Not yet anyway.
Meanwhile, the UK is simply awash in plastic clothing and seeks solutions.
The Daily Mail interviewed environmentalists on the subject of natural fiber clothing versus inorganic synthetic clothing, plastic clothing. Said one, "Most people have no idea that every time they buy [synthetic clothing] they are helping to pollute the world."
The Daily Mail determined that more than half of the UK's emissions of the poisonous greenhouse gas nitrous oxide comes from nylon production. The same report included a comment from consumer magazine In Touch: "[S]ynthetic materials are responsible for large-scale factory pollution of our waterways, rivers, canals and even the sea."
-In a recent WWF report, Deeper Luxury (p32), the manager of a suit outfitter lamented, "Ninety per cent of [the] clothing [that] people buy these days ends up as landfill within two years." He also noted, however, that high-end brands defy this trend, offering repair facilities to ensure that natural fiber garments last several years or even generations.
Commented an environmentalist to the Daily Mail, "Unlike a real fur coat which can be refashioned and may last a lifetime, a fake fur jacket is likely to be thrown out at the end of the season" to end up in a landfill.(13)
"There it will sit with the rest of the tights and stockings made of nylon which have been discarded. Buried out of sight, but a few feet under the ground, the chemicals in them can seep out into nearby fields and rivers. It is a pollution threat to humans, wildlife and our domestic animals."(14)
***
What the experts say ...
From Biodegradable and sustainable fibres, edited by R.S. Blackburn, Woodhead Publishing, 2005.
Introduction by R.S. Blackburn, page xv:
The main problems with synthetic polymers are that they are non-degradable and non-renewable. Since their invention, the use of these synthetic fibres has increased oil consumption significantly, and this continues today; arguably, polyester now is the most used of all fibres, taking over from cotton. Oil and petroleum are non-renewable (non-sustainable) resources and at the current rate of consumption, these fossil fuels are only expected to last for another 50-60 years; the current petroleum consumption rate is estimated to be 100,000 times the natural generation rate.(17) The Energy Information Administration projects that world conventional oil production will peak somewhere between 2021 and 2112, depending on the annual production growth rate (0-3%) and resource estimates (2248-3896 billion barrels). A maximum production growth rate (3% a year) combined with a low resource estimate (2248 billion barrels) gives a peak production year of 2021. For the expected (mean-resource) USGS case (3003 billion barrels) the peak will be somewhere between 2030 and 2075. This means that the raw material for fibres will change.
An even more important problem with the use of fossil energy is the huge translocation of carbon from the ground into the atmosphere accompanied by emissions of sulphur and nitrogen oxides as well as all kinds of hydrocarbons, and heavy metals. Fossil fuels are also the dominant global source of anthropogenic greenhouse gases (GHG). Of even more concern is the ability of polymeric fibres to remain unchanged in the environment as polymers do not degrade very readily, which has exacerbated the already existing ecological and environmental problems of waste building; the volume in waste disposal and landfill is very high.
Chap. 1. Microbial processes in the degradation of fibers, by P.M. Fedorak, University of Alberta:
A fiber is the basic element of fabrics and other textile structure. A fiber is typically defined as a material having a length at least 100 times its diameter. These can be natural, such as cellulose or wool, or synthetic, such as nylon. A textile is any product made from fibers. Š Of course, natural fibers like wool and cotton are broken down through biotic process. Microorganisms have evolved enzymes that attack key bonds in these natural polymers, thereby releasing monomers that can be used as carbon and energy sources for microbial growth. In contrast, microorganisms lack enzymes to break down many synthetic fibers, thus these materials persist and accumulate in the environment.
Chap. 9. Biodegradable natural fiber composites, by A.N. Netravalli, Cornell University:
Most of the fibers and resins currently available on the market are derived from petroleum. There are two major problems associated with using petroleum as feedstock for polymers. First, it is a non-renewable (non-sustainable) resource and at the current rate of consumption, by some estimates, it is expected to last for only 50-60 years. Also the current petroleum consumption rate is estimated to be 100,000 times the rate of natural generation rate.(17) Second, most fibers and resins, made using petroleum are non-degradable. Although this is desirable in many applications from the durability point of view, at the end of their life, they are not easy to dispose of.
Notes:
1) reusablebags.com keeps statistics on plastic bag use. See also http://www.discountbiodegradablebags.co.uk for information on bio-"plastic" created from organic sources such as plants, as opposed to "traditional" plastics produced from inorganic and non-renewable sources: oil. 2) By 'bagging it,' Ireland rids itself of a plastic nuisance, by Elisabeth Rosenthal, International Herald Tribune, Jan. 31, 2008. 3) Complementing an excellent article, Plastic bags are killing us, by Katherine Mieszkowski, for Salon.com, Aug. 10, 2007, is a video tour of San Francisco's Norcal Recycling with a quote from the manager, "They're made from oil. How much more do you need to hear?" 4) An interesting book on how long everything would take to break down and biodegrade (or not, in the case of plastics) is The World Without Us, by Alan Weisman, 2007. 5) See for example, Continent-size toxic stew of plastic trash fouling swath of Pacific Ocean, San Francisco Chronicle, Oct. 19, 2007, and Floating, Texas-sized garbage patch threatens Pacific marine sanctuary, ARS Technica, Oct. 23, 2007, which includes an inventory of the waste. While much plastic in the ocean eventually fouls beaches where it can be collected, the Pacific gyre highlights the importance of waste management for plastics. 6) According to the action plan of the Plastic Debris, Rivers to Sea Project, about 100 million tons of plastic are produced each year of which about 10% ends up in the sea where about 70% sinks to the bottom. Fully 80% of the ocean's litter originated on land. This has similarities to pollution drift first noted by the Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme. 7) "In the last few years the Republic of Ireland declared that they no longer had any space for landfill, imposing large taxes on the use and disposal of polymers." From the introduction to Biodegradable and sustainable fibres, edited by R.S. Blackburn, Woodhead Publishing, 2005. 8) No one appears to be counting the billions of plush toys now being sold, including by zoos, aquariums and even green groups that should know better! Shouldn't products bearing conservation messages come from ntural fibers that are renewable and biodegradable? 9) The yield is three synthetic jackets per gallon of oil. To its credit, in 2005 Patagonia, Inc., one of the world's largest producers of synthetic clothing which it has long promoted as eco-friendly, started a recycling program to collect discarded garments at its stores and recycle them into more clothing products. The bulk of Patagonia's clothing is made from recovered plastic soda bottles (another oil product) which are not biodegradable and hence its products are not biodegradable. 10) This and the following statistics are from Summary report: Sustainable clothing roadmap stakeholder meeting & next steps, Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, Sept. 5, 2007. 11) Most of the recovered stream is exported for reuse overseas, Africa being the main market. 12) The synthetic clothing industry is encountering "feedstock problems". In other words, the raw material, oil, has become more expensive. See for example, Prices of petrochemical feedstock and synthetic fibres and filaments in the first half of 2004, Fibre Chemistry, Sept. 2004. 13) Should you be faking it? Are you wearing fake fur and feeling just a tiny bit smug? Daily Mail, Nov. 22, 2004. 14) The US military has banned the wearing of synthetic clothing off base in Iraq due to serious burn injuries since such clothing melts, just like plastic, when soldiers are injured. See Synthetic clothes off limits to Marines outside bases in Iraq, American Forces Press Service, Apr. 12, 2006. 15) Personal communication between Diane DeZan of the Fiber Economics Bureau and Joe Casola of ICF Consulting, Aug. 4, 2000, as cited in Inventory of U.S. Greenhouse Gas Emissions and Sinks: 1990 - 2001, Environmental Protection Agency, Apr. 15, 2003. 16) Fur garments are made from leather treated lightly (dressed) to retain the hair, and with proper care can last for generations. They are also restyled or recycled, such as through FCUSA's Furry Friends program, which transforms surplus furs into charitable donations. If this is no longer feasible, they can be composted, and are included in "o.k. to compost" lists such as this one from Home & Garden TV, and will biodegrade back into the Earth. (Petrochemical synthetics cannot be composted and will simply pollute your garden's soil.) 17) Stevens, E.S., Green Plastics, Princeton University Press, Princeton, 2002.
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I now use blue,to define my posts.
Life is a time capsule we strive to fill with precious memories.
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#673331 - 04/09/08 04:17 PM
Re: Wonder where the oil went???. Check our Ocean!!!
[Re: Mira Trapper]
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LT GREY
trapper
Registered: 04/09/07
Posts: 5554
Loc: Central Ohio
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Mira Trapper, YOU HAVE TO BE ONE OF THE MOST INFORMED TRAPPERS OUT THERE....ALWAYS ENJOY YOUR POST!
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#673655 - 04/09/08 08:21 PM
Re: Wonder where the oil went???. Check our Ocean!
[Re: LT GREY]
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Mira Trapper
trapper
Registered: 09/17/07
Posts: 689
Loc: Cape Breton Island Nova Scotia
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Mira Trapper, YOU HAVE TO BE ONE OF THE MOST INFORMED TRAPPERS OUT THERE....ALWAYS ENJOY YOUR POST!
Thank you sir. If you are a soldier as your name implies, I guarantee you you already have a very large quantity of respect from me. I try to keep up on the information that our young trappers are going to need in the future to defend conservation methodology. I only hope they are absorbing my posts and those of others that give trapping tips and ammunition for them to continue to enjoy the wilderness as I have.
Edited by Mira Trapper (04/09/08 08:22 PM)
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I now use blue,to define my posts.
Life is a time capsule we strive to fill with precious memories.
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#674406 - 04/10/08 10:07 AM
Re: Wonder where the oil went???. Check our Ocean!!!
[Re: Mira Trapper]
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TrapperMikeNC
trapper
Registered: 01/04/07
Posts: 565
Loc: NC,Wataga county
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Mira You are the Paul Revere ,of Trapperman.com for sure always enjoy your most informative post thanks
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TrapperMikeNC Member NTA NCTA NCWDA & BRFH "I would rather be lost in the woods,.. then found at home" http://www.trappermike.com
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#674414 - 04/10/08 10:16 AM
Re: Wonder where the oil went???. Check our Ocean!!!
[Re: TrapperMikeNC]
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Geezerman
trapper
Registered: 12/22/06
Posts: 4271
Loc: Allen County, Indiana
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Good read, something I've said for years since the plastic bag craze hit. I hate them.
rather see paper sacks, they carry groceries better and fit more in them. They are much more easily reused and recycled, plus you put your trash in them they will degrade in the landfill.
I recycle everything I can, saves a lot of garbage for just a little more work. Too many people are selfish these days and don't want to , in their words, waste time recycling. Yet they'll sit in front of a tv for hours watching a rerun show they've seen a hundred times.
I believe in the therory, if it ain't natural, don't use it. And by natural I mean something that is renewable. Wool, cotton, silk are all renewable resources, meaning if managed right you can have a never ending supply. Sooner or later we will run out of oil.
I hate to see the trend going on now with ethenol. You should never use your food source as an energy source, unless its an emergency.
Plain and simple, we've got too many "liberal" people that have over educated their brains capacity. Kind of like when you go to the all you can eat burrito buffet. Sure it taste great and you want to "get" your moneys' worth, but what are the consequences the next day?? Get my drift
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I'm just a bitter, small town midwestern , gun in one hand and bible in the other leprechan
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#674451 - 04/10/08 10:59 AM
Re: Wonder where the oil went???. Check our Ocean!!!
[Re: bobCATching]
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Ole Hawkeye
trapper
Registered: 12/25/06
Posts: 2631
Loc: Oregon
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The yuppies think they are saving trees by using plastic instead of paper. When I do use a palstic bag, it get's reused several times, then it usually ends up being used as a body bag for a carcass of some skinned critter.
I've been saying for a couple of years that the garbage patch might have something to do with the decline of our salmon population.
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Salmon will shine again!
Farmed Salmon. Dyed for you.
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#674561 - 04/10/08 12:45 PM
Re: Wonder where the oil went???. Check our Ocean!
[Re: Ole Hawkeye]
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Mira Trapper
trapper
Registered: 09/17/07
Posts: 689
Loc: Cape Breton Island Nova Scotia
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Some of you might find this debate interesting about agriculture impacts & how collateral damage is much larger in crop production then the Vegans are willing to admit. Lot of info that I provided to the vegans on the thread. They hate me for providing facts that point out just how much negative impact the planet would suffer under the vegan movement.
http://www.envirolink.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=6151&st=0&sk=t&sd=a&start=30
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I now use blue,to define my posts.
Life is a time capsule we strive to fill with precious memories.
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