Page 4 - Shore Soap Co. 2019 Wholesale Catalog
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 8 million metric tons of plastic enter our oceans each year.
Each year, around eight million metric tons of plastic waste invade our oceans. Reports show that most plastic packaging is only used once; 95% of the value of plastic packaging material, worth $80 billion-$120 billion annually, is lost to the economy after a short first use. The New Plastics Economy, an initiative led by the Ellen MacArthur Foundation (in collaboration with a broad group of leading companies, cities, philanthropists, policymakers, academics, students, NGOs, and citizens), is rethinking and redesigning the future of plastics, starting with the packaging. This ambitious three-year initiative provides a vision of a global economy in which plastics never become waste and outlines concrete steps towards achieving the systemic shift needed.
weforum.org / newplasticseconomy.org
Micro plastics are entering our food chain.
When plastics end up in the ocean, they become a sponge for chemicals that are already out there. Much of these plastics are not just floating on the surface, many are broken down into microplastic particles. These microplastics become coated in bacteria and algae, resulting in fish mistaking them for a high energy meal, literally stuffing themselves with chemically absorbed plastics. While most of the actual plastic bits end up in the guts of the fish, once the plastic interacts with the fish’s stomach, chemicals are released and transferred into the bloodstream and flesh; thus edible parts of the fish that end up on our plates. These chemicals can be harmful to humans in accumulated concentrations. In simplest terms: plastic absorbs chemicals, fish eats plastic, human eats fish.
Every minute, the equivalent of 1 garbage truck of plastic is dumped into our oceans.
Studies undertaken by the World Economic Forum, the Ellen MacArthur Foundation and McKinsey & Company have showed the scale of the breakdown in the global plastic system. Of the 78 million tons of plastic packaging being produced annually, a full 32% of the plastic is left to flow into our oceans, the equivalent of one garbage truck of plastic being dumped into the ocean each minute.
weforum.org / plasticoceans.org
At current rates, by 2050 there will be more plastic than fish in the world’s oceans.
According to reports, if we keep producing (and failing to properly dispose of) plastic at predicted rates, plastic in the ocean will outweigh fish by 2050. The World Economic Forum has reported that the worldwide uses of plastic has increased 20-fold in the past 50 years, and is expected to double again in the next 20 years. By 2050, we’ll be producing more than three times as much plastic as we did in 2014.
weforum.org / washingtonpost.com
 npr.org / theguardian.com
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