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Onedayforearth

Food wastage

Every year, one third of all food produced globally goes to waste. This not only affects our wallets but also has a significant impact on our environment. When food waste ends up in landfills, it releases methane gas, which contributes to climate change. We can reduce food waste by buying only what we need, planning our meals, and composting our food scraps. Let's work together to reduce food waste and make a positive impact on our environment. Food waste is a significant problem that affects individuals, businesses, and the environment. According to the United Nations, approximately one-third of all food produced globally goes to waste each year. This equates to 1.3 billion tonnes of food, which is enough to feed three billion people. Food waste has many negative consequences. Firstly, it is a waste of resources. Producing food requires land, water, energy, and other resources. When food is wasted, these resources are also wasted. This is not only bad for the environment but also ...

Plastic monster



PLASTIC ~ THE REAL MONSTER

Plastic floats. This is where our story begins.

Plastic monsters came to life around the world, rising up from dirty landfills, climbing over piles of trash & even swimming up and out of seas, lakes, rivers & oceans to make a very long and sometimes arduous journeys back home to their source.

This plastic monsters may not be real, but this represent a very serious crisis: the plastic monster is a reality which actually portraits the world’s plastic waste. 
 
Microplastics are very small portions of plastic that pollute the environment. Microplastics are not a selected type of plastic, but as a substitute any sort of plastic fragment that is much less than 5 mm in length. They enter natural ecosystems from an expansion of sources, such as cosmetics, apparel, and industrial procedures. 

 Classifications of microplastics currently exist. Primary microplastics are any plastic fragments or debris which might be already 5 mm in size or less before entering the surroundings. Those encompass microfibers from clothing, microbeads, and plastic pellets (also referred to as nurdles).

Secondary microplastics are microplastics which might be created from the degradation of larger plastic merchandise after they input the environment via herbal weathering approaches. Such resources of secondary microplastics include water and soda bottles, fishing nets, and plastic baggage.

Each kinds are recognized to persist inside the surroundings at excessive degrees, in particular in aquatic and marine ecosystems. The time period macroplastics is used to differentiate larger plastic waste, consisting of plastic bottles. 

Microplastic samples additionally, plastics degrade slowly, frequently over hundreds if not lots of years. This will increase the chance of microplastics being ingested and included into, and collected in, the our bodies and tissues of many organisms. The entire cycle and motion of microplastics in the surroundings isn't yet recognised, but research is presently underway to investigate this problem. 

Plastic is everywhere, and is increasing pollution. But, it also affords the basis of our cutting-edge infrastructures including buildings, garb, and communications networks. In spite of the important campaigns for the removal of unmarried-use plastics, it's miles a fabric that can not be without problems brushed off. 

Plastic is one of the maximum intimate manifestations of our connections with oil, as it's miles utilized in the whole lot of baby bottles t. It's also one of the essential materials used inside the manufacturing of current artwork, from moulds to vinyl to paints.

 A life-time of plastic the primary plastics made from fossil fuels are simply over a century antique. They came into sizable use after international warfare II and are observed today in the whole lot from automobiles to scientific gadgets to food packaging. Their useful lifetime varies. As soon as disposed of, they break down into smaller fragments that linger for hundreds of years. 

 That trash now money owed for nearly half of all plastic waste generated globally; maximum of it in no way gets recycled or incinerated. Boom in Asia as the economies in Asia develop, so does demand for consumer products—and plastics. Half of the arena’s plastics are made there, 29 percentage in China. Legacy of world warfare II Shortages of herbal materials at some stage in the conflict caused a look for artificial options—and to an exponential surge in plastic manufacturing that keeps today.

Cups, napkins, plates, serving dishes, serving spoons, cutlery, tablecloths, decorations, and leftover food – parties bring on ample opportunity for single use plastic and a LOT of waste. Even for those of us who aspire to a less-waste lifestyle, when it comes to throwing a party, the single-use plastic monster is hard to avoid. If you’re looking for strategies to reduce party waste and keep the single-use plastic monster at bay, read on.  These tips work for any party, regardless of the season.

Because of our addiction to plastics, we have let them spread in all directions and all over our planet. Statistics are suitably alarming from the surface of the oceans, where 6 plastics continents have formed, counting between 5-13 million tonnes of plastics (most likely around 10), or 5.5 trillion single pieces (are you coughing up yet?). Also, at the bottom of the ocean, a plastic bag has entered the Guinness world record book for being the most in-depth piece of trash in the history of mankind at almost 11,000 meters within the Mariana Trench.

What is plastic, after all? How can such material be used for multiple purposes? From pipes, forks, packaging and literally, every thinkable object? The word plastic is derived from the ability to be malleable and moulded almost infinitely to take any desired form. This characteristic is called plasticity.

This is a fact, nature always finds a way. And when nature is being thrown new conditions, such as during a brutal change of climate, either natural or artificially induced, or when a brand new material like plastic arrives into ecosystems, it suffers, but it adapts. What are the implications of introducing so much artificial material in nature? There are many.

Nestlé and other multinational corporations produce massive amounts of single-use plastic packaging. As we all know, plastic is devastating communities, polluting natural environments, and threatening marine creatures around the world. Last year, Nestlé used 1.7 million tonnes of plastic packaging. And while their latest move is to try to argue the exact numbers, the simple fact remains that Nestlé produced more plastic last year than the year before.

A large number of well-known international faces, yet to be announced, are expected to pledge their support for the project across social media on 7 August when the digital cards will go live. The Plastic Monster is due to appear on a UK coastline to drive home the message, also on the release date.

The main issue is that living creatures cannot transform these materials into organic matter. So, plastics stay in the environment for thousands of years, only decomposing into micro-particles, also called “micro-plastic”, which are smaller, harder to collect versions of the same molecule. Hence, the shocking pictures of animal’s plastic-filled stomachs and plastic poop. That’s what happens when you eat something indigestible, except on a planetary scale this time.

A huge plastic monster, 20 meters long and covered in Nestlé’s plastic waste, appeared in the Netherlands in late March. From there it journeyed by boat toward Switzerland, stopping by a few cities in Europe as it traveled up the Rhine through Germany and France.

“Single-use plastics are extra-evil monsters. Although it only accounts for less than 10% of national plastic production, single-use plastics contribute to the majority of pollution in the sea. Ironically plastic is a strong material that lasts hundreds of years, but is actually designed to be used for only 30 minutes and then discarded. This doesn’t make sense, and this should be ended.” – Tiza Mafira, Founder of the Gerakan Diet Kantong Plastik.

Greenpeace activists joined a 15-foot tall monster in a visit to Nestlé’s headquarters in Arlington, Virginia, delivering Nestlé plastic pollution gathered from streets, rivers, and beaches across the country and demanding that the company take responsibility for the over 1.5 million metric tons of single-use plastic it produces annually.

“Last year, Nestlé produced a shocking 1.7 million tonnes of plastic packaging – over 300 garbage trucks worth a day – a 13% increase from the year before. It is totally irresponsible that Nestlé produces hundreds of billions of plastic items every year that are used for a few seconds and then left to contaminate our communities, food chains and ecosystems for generations.

Activists toured the state with the plastic monster this week, stopping in Tallahassee, Orlando, St. Petersburg, Gainesville and Lakeland to call attention to the company's stance on plastics.

To warn people about the dangers of unrecycled plastic waste, the Surfrider Foundation has teamed up with Rankin to invade social media with a plastic monster.The world’s coastlines are crowded with waste and our oceans are full of plastic, threatening marine life. 

Out of human neglect, a terrifying representation of the impending crisis has risen – a half-living plastic beast called the Plastic Monster. 

In 2015, just 9% of all plastic waste in the US was recycled, according to The Intercept, and that number has only gotten lower. The vast majority of the 300m tons of plastic produced globally each year is thrown into landfills or washed up on beaches.

The fight against ocean pollution is urgent and the Plastic Monster seemed the perfect way to hit home the horror that we have created!

To resolve the plastic waste trouble, many recyclers started promoting their product.
It is important we get more alternatives to plastic as soon as possible.

So, lets take a pledge to break free from plastic.

#BreakFreeFromPlastic


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