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Friday, 1 July 2022

How To Be Cautious About Cadmium Exposure-an earth911 report

How To Be Cautious About Cadmium Exposure

ByGemma Alexander

May 30, 2022
woman trying to avoid secondhand smoke

Cadmium wasn’t discovered until the 19th century, when it quickly found use as a pigment that could produce bright yellows, oranges, and reds. Cadmium is still used in some pigments. But today it is also an important component of batteries, metal alloys, electroplating, solar panels, and plastic stabilizers. It’s kind of hard to imagine how we ever got along without it. And that’s too bad because cadmium and all its compounds are highly toxic and carcinogenic. In fact, cadmium has earned a place on the Red List of materials that green builders try to avoid.

Cadmium

Cadmium is a naturally occurring heavy metal. Elemental cadmium (Cd) is a soft, malleable, bluish-white material extracted from zinc ores, and increasingly recovered from batteries. Unlike other serious toxins, acute exposure to cadmium is rare. Rather, health effects occur through chronic exposure and the subsequent accumulation of cadmium in tissues over time. Skin does not absorb cadmium. But cadmium can be inhaled or ingested. The most significant exposure pathway for cadmium toxicity is smoking. Among nonsmokers, contaminated foods are the highest risk.

Cadmium Ingestion

Although mollusks and crustaceans can sometimes accumulate high concentrations of cadmium, more than 80% of dietary cadmium intake comes from plants. Plants absorb cadmium from soil. Except for crops grown in contaminated soil, dietary cadmium levels remain low enough to be safe for most people. People with anemia, the chronically undernourished, and those with hypertension may be more susceptible to cadmium exposure. Addressing these underlying health risks is a better strategy than focusing on food choices. Even unhealthy quantities of cadmium are measured in millionths of a gram.

While cadmium consumption is rarely an issue for adults, it can be a problem for small children in much the same way as lead exposure is. In 2010, there was a massive recall of children’s products, including play and costume jewelry and other toys with elevated levels of cadmium. Young children’s tendency to put things in their mouths created a risk of ingestion. In 2018, Consumer Reports found concerning levels of cadmium in many popular baby and toddler foods and presented suggestions for safer snacking.

Big containers of used batteries for recycling
Workers in certain industries — including nonferrous metals and NiCad battery recycling — are at a high risk of cadmium exposure.

Occupational Exposure to Cadmium

Workers in the nonferrous metal industry; those involved in the manufacture of products containing cadmium or doing work such as plating, soldering, and welding; and those involved in nickel-cadmium (Ni-Cd or NiCad) battery recycling face the highest risk of exposure. They may experience flu-like symptoms from acute exposure and cancer, kidney, bone, and lung disease from chronic exposure.

Although occupational exposure is more likely to be a problem than products containing cadmium, it’s helpful to know what items in the home contain cadmium.

Batteries

Nickel-cadmium batteries are in widespread use in portable, rechargeable devices like cellphones, laptops, and power tools that are an important part of daily life. Alternative battery types like lithium-ion and lead-acid have their own health and safety concerns. So, even though the expanding Ni-Cd battery recycling industry is a growing concern for cadmium exposure, recycling your rechargeable batteries is still the best course of action.

Electronics

Heavy metals, including cadmium, are found in a wide variety of electronic products from televisions to computers. These items must be properly recycled to keep cadmium out of the soil, groundwater, and even the air. Although it is not always easy to recycle electronics, it is important to do so and may even be required by law where you live.

The European Union’s Restriction of Hazardous Substances Directive essentially bans cadmium from electronics except where absolutely necessary for product performance. Purchasing electronic products that are EU compliant, TCO certified, or certified under the EPEAT program managed by the Global Electronics Council will help you avoid cadmium and other known toxins as much as possible.

yellow and red artist paint
Today, cadmium pigments are mostly used in plastics but are still found in some artists’ paint.

Cookware

Cadmium is not commonly found in cookware, but some glazes and coatings on glass or ceramic can leach cadmium into food. Since ingestion is the primary pathway for accumulating cadmium in the body, it’s best to look for nontoxic cookware and kitchenware options.

Pigments

Like lead, cadmium used to be included in house paints. Old paint can lead to exposure through chipping paint or paint dust created during construction. Today, cadmium pigments are mostly used in plastics but are still found in some artists’ paint. Painters should avoid skin contact with wet paint to avoid accidental ingestion and take care when cleaning brushes. Spray applications and sanding dry paint can also create a risk through inhalation. A movement to ban cadmium from paints in the EU led to strict limits on the cadmium content of paints sold there. There are many cadmium-free paint options.

 Very informative and interesting! I have been told of instances where painters have collapsed because they were using this type of paint and didn't have any ventilation or take breaks! Very dangerous indeed! There are warnings on the containers advising people to use utmost caution but unfortunately this is not always the case.

The blog song for today is: " Best of my love" by the Eagles

TTFN

 

Tuesday, 28 June 2022

Morrisons becomes the first supermarket to scrap plastic milk cartons - A report from the Daily Mail.co.uk

 A report from the Daily Mail newspaper

Morrisons becomes the first supermarket to scrap plastic milk cartons and replace them with its own-brand fresh milk in plant-based cardboard cartons

  • Morrisons will save around 100 tonnes of plastic in move to cardboard cartons
  • Carbon neutral Tetra Pak cartons will be made from plant-based paperboard
  • They contain thin layer of plastic coating and twist caps made from polyethylene
  • Majority of its own-label fresh juice will also move from plastic bottles to cartons

Morrisons has become the first supermarket to scrap plastic milk cartons and replace them with its own-brand fresh milk in plant-based cardboard cartons.

Nine types of Morrisons fresh milk will be sold in carbon neutral Tetra Pak cartons, saving around 100 tonnes of plastic each year.

Fresh milk currently accounts for around 10 per cent of all plastic packaging used in the UK, but the new Tetra Pak cartons will instead be made from plant-based paperboard.

The new cartons contain a very thin layer of plastic coating and twist caps made from polyethylene - procured from sustainably sourced sugarcane.

The nine products have also been certified by the Forest Stewardship Council, Carbon Trust and Carbon Neutral.

Tony Fearon, Dairy Category Director at Morrisons, said: 'Fresh milk does not need to be in a plastic bottle. It keeps just as fresh in a carton. 

'Fresh milk is the top user of plastic packaging in our stores, so this will result in significant plastic reduction. 

'Tetra Pak has also been independently verified as a better sustainable packaging option. If customers take to it, we could be looking to move all of our fresh milk to Tetra Pak cartons in time.'

Morrisons will save around 100 tonnes of plastic packaging in the move to carbon neutral cardboard cartons

Morrisons will save around 100 tonnes of plastic packaging in the move to carbon neutral cardboard cartons

The new cartons (pictured) contain a very thin layer of plastic coating and twist caps made from polyethylene - derived from sustainably sourced sugarcane

The new cartons (pictured) contain a very thin layer of plastic coating and twist caps made from polyethylene - derived from sustainably sourced sugarcane

The cartons will be kerbside recyclable in most regions, as well as recycling banks across the country.

They will come in 500ml, 1 litre and 2 litre sizes and cover skimmed, semi-skimmed and whole milk options, Morrisons has confirmed.

Prices will be 60p for 500ml, 95p for one litre and £1.25 for two litres.

It comes as Morrisons has also announced that the majority of its own-label fresh juice will move from plastic bottles to cartons - a move that will remove a further 678 tonnes of plastic a year.

The supermarket also became the first in the UK to scrap ‘use by’ dates on milk last month.

The company switched to ‘best before’ dates on 90 per cent of milk bottles and cartons from January 31 to encourage customers to bin it only when it smells off – and see the date as no more than a guide to freshness.  

Hugh Jones, Managing Director of Advisory at the Carbon Trust, said: 'We welcome this move by Morrisons towards reducing the environmental impact of its milk packaging. 

'Our Carbon Trust ‘Carbon Neutral’ label, which will feature on these milk products in their new Tetra Pak packaging, recognises the CO2 reduction of this move and certifies that the cradle-to-grave carbon footprint of the packaging is in line with targets.'

Decreasing the volume of single-use plastic in stores is said to be the top concern for the supermarket giant's customers.

What great news! 

Let us hope that others follow suit. TetraPak being the main suppliers of milk cartons and other cartons, as I previously showed because of the many different components of it,without a lot of effort not easily recycled, so reading that they are behind the change is encouraging news.

The Blog song for today is: "Bloody Well Right" by Supertramp

TTFN

Sunday, 26 June 2022

Broken Phone? Don’t Throw It Out; Fix It Yourself - a report from earth911.com

 

Broken Phone? Don’t Throw It Out; Fix It Yourself

ByEarth911

Jun 16, 2022 right to repair, smartphone
Man repairing smartphone

When your phone breaks or just doesn’t work as well as it used to, do you go out and buy a new model? It’s an exciting prospect to get a new phone. But tossing out our old phones has negative environmental impacts. With just a few repairs, your phone might work fine for several years and save you money, too.

If your phone isn’t functioning as well as it should, you have a choice to make: Throw it out and hurt the environment by buying a new phone, begin the process of recycling it, or repair it yourself. Let’s talk about why you should choose the latter two and how to get your phone up and running again.

The Environmental Cost of Discarding Our Phones

There are numerous reasons why improperly discarding your smartphone is bad for the environment. For starters, your phone is made up of many materials, including lead, mercury, arsenic, and cadmium. If we just throw away our smartphones, these useful but toxic materials end up as waste in landfills. From there, they can potentially leak into the soil and make their way into our water supply.

When we don’t reclaim those materials by recycling our e-waste, companies need to mine new materials from the earth. This process is harmful to the local ecosystems and results in carbon emissions from machinery used to mine, transport, and process the materials. The use of recycled materials results in fewer emissions.

Also, when we are so quick to replace our phones, factories and manufacturing plants respond to the demand by producing more new smartphones. The production process, packaging, transporting — and even warehousing of excess inventory — all consume resources and energy, resulting in more carbon emissions that contribute to climate change.

When we buy and consume more than we need, we are not working towards sustainability. So, to help the planet and save some money; consider trying the repairs yourself.

You Can Make Many Repairs Yourself

Although smartphones are becoming more complex every year, fixing some common issues is easier than you may think. By searching online at websites like iFixit, you learn which tools you need and get step-by-step instructions to fix any brand of phone. For instance, to replace the battery on an iPhone, you can use special tools to open the phone, unscrew the existing battery, make the switch, and then seal up the device like it never happened.

Whether you have an Android or iPhone, you can find instructions to replace your battery or screen, change out a headphone jack, remove the SIM card, and do many other tasks. Although you can find repair guides online, some of these repairs may need an expert; take your phone to a certified dealer if necessary. Always check the fine print on your phone contract to determine if fixing something will void your warranty.

If the phone appears to be a total loss or the manufacturer tells you it cannot be fixed, make sure it gets to a facility that will recycle it. You can do this by bringing it to the phone company or a local electronics retailer that accepts electronics for recycling, like Best Buy. If the phone still works but you still need a newer version, then consider donating it to a charitable organization or Goodwill, where they may be able to sell it to someone who needs it. Before you donate or sell it, be sure to remove all data from your phone for your protection.

Phone Companies Are Creating Solutions

The good news is that phone companies are becoming part of the solution by creating repair programs that can help you use your phone longer. For instance, Samsung is collaborating with iFixit to give customers access to parts, tools, and instructional guides to help them repair their phones. Initially, Samsung Galaxy owners will have the opportunity to replace display assemblies, back glass, and charging ports, according to Samsung. The company will accept the used parts for recycling. Samsung says it has plans to expand this self-repair option to other devices.

Over at Apple, they have a program called Self Service Repair. While currently limited to U.S. customers and iPhone versions 12, 13, and third-generation SE, Apple has plans to expand the service. Through the online portal, customers can access repair manuals, order parts and professional repair tools, and print a label to return replaced parts for recycling. Apple recommends that only those with knowledge and experience attempt to repair their device. To purchase Apple parts, you must supply your serial number, so make sure you have that before you start.

It’s worth noting that even if your phone doesn’t need a repair now, you can help it last longer by adding a screen protector, restarting the device periodically, and removing unnecessary apps and files.

In the end, the choice to repair your phone instead of throwing it away is a good idea for everyone. If repair is not an option, be sure to recycle your phone so that valuable materials can be reclaimed and reused instead of polluting the planet.

About the Author

Sam Bowman writes about people, the environment, tech, and how they merge. He enjoys getting to utilize the internet for community without actually having to leave his house. In his spare time, he likes running, reading, and combining the two in a run to his local bookstore.

Feature image by Kilian Seiler on Unsplash

I am so pleased to be reading a report like this one because it is not the first one ! I am seeing more and more people pushing to reuse, repair and conserve what they have instead of rushing out and buying new. 

The blog song for today is:"Save me"by Queen.

TTFN

Thursday, 23 June 2022

Carbon dioxide now more than 50% higher than pre-industrial levels- a report from: https://www.noaa.gov

Carbon dioxide now more than 50% higher than pre-industrial levels

Air samples from NOAA's Mauna Loa observatory in Hawaii provide important data for climate scientists around the world. On Thursday, NOAA announced that analysis of data from their global sampling network showed that levels of the potent greenhouse gas methane recorded the largest annual increase ever observed in 2021, while carbon dioxide continued to increase at historically high rates.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The Mauna Loa Observatory in Hawaii is a benchmark site for measuring carbon dioxide, or CO2. NOAA and the Scripps Institution of Oceanography make independent measurements from this station on the slopes of Mauna Loa volcano. (NOAA)

Carbon dioxide measured at NOAA’s Mauna Loa Atmospheric Baseline Observatory peaked for 2022 at 421 parts per million in May, pushing the atmosphere further into territory not seen for millions of years, scientists from NOAA and Scripps Institution of Oceanography offsite link at the University of California San Diego announced today. 

NOAA's measurements of carbon dioxide at the mountaintop observatory on Hawaii’s Big Island averaged 420.99 parts per million (ppm), an increase of 1.8 ppm over 2021. Scientists at Scripps, which maintains an independent record, calculated a monthly average of 420.78 ppm. 

“The science is irrefutable: humans are altering our climate in ways that our economy and our infrastructure must adapt to,” said NOAA Administrator Rick Spinrad, Ph.D. “We can see the impacts of climate change around us every day. The relentless increase of carbon dioxide measured at Mauna Loa is a stark reminder that we need to take urgent, serious steps to become a more Climate Ready Nation.” 

CO2 pollution is generated by burning fossil fuels for transportation and electrical generation, by cement manufacturing, deforestation, agriculture and many other practices. Along with other greenhouse gases, CO2 traps heat radiating from the planet’s surface that would otherwise escape into space, causing the planet’s atmosphere to warm steadily, which unleashes a cascade of weather impacts, including episodes of extreme heat, drought and wildfire activity, as well as heavier precipitation, flooding and tropical storm activity.   

Impacts to the world's oceans from greenhouse gas pollution include increasing sea surface temperatures, rising sea levels, and an increased absorption of carbon, which makes sea water more acidic, leads to ocean deoxygenation, and makes it more difficult for some marine organisms to survive.

Prior to the Industrial Revolution, CO2 levels were consistently around 280 ppm for almost 6,000 years of human civilization. Since then, humans have generated an estimated 1.5 trillion tons of CO2 pollution offsite link, much of which will continue to warm the atmosphere for thousands of years. 

COlevels are now comparable to the Pliocene Climatic Optimum, between 4.1 and 4.5 million years ago, when they were close to, or above 400 ppm. During that time, sea levels were between 5 and 25 meters higher than today offsite link, high enough to drown many of the world’s largest modern cities. Temperatures then averaged 7 degrees Fahrenheit higher than in pre-industrial times, and studies indicate offsite link that large forests occupied today’s Arctic tundra.

This graph shows the monthly mean carbon dioxide measured at Mauna Loa Observatory, Hawaii, the longest record of direct measurements of CO2 in the atmosphere. Monitoring was Initiated by C. David Keeling of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in March of 1958 at a NOAA weather station. NOAA started its own independent and complementary CO2 measurements in May of 1974.
This graph shows the monthly mean carbon dioxide measured at Mauna Loa Observatory, Hawaii, the longest record of direct measurements of CO2 in the atmosphere. Monitoring was Initiated by C. David Keeling of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in March of 1958 at a NOAA weather station. NOAA started its own independent and complementary CO2 measurements in May of 1974. (NOAA Global Monitoring Laboratory, Scripps Institute of Oceanography at the University of California San Diego. 

Mauna Loa ideally located to monitor global pollution 

NOAA’s observatory, situated high on the slopes of the Mauna Loa volcano, is the global benchmark location for monitoring atmospheric CO2. At an elevation of 11,141 feet above sea level, the observatory samples air undisturbed by the influence of local pollution or vegetation, and produces measurements that represent the average state of the atmosphere in the northern hemisphere. 

Charles David Keeling, a scientist with the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, initiated on-site measurements of CO2 at NOAA’s weather station on Mauna Loa in 1958. Keeling was the first to recognize that CO2 levels in the Northern Hemisphere fell during the growing season, and rose as plants died back in the fall, and he documented these CO2 fluctuations in a record that came to be known as the Keeling Curve offsite link. He was also the first to recognize that, despite the seasonal fluctuation, CO2 levels were rising every year. 

NOAA began measurements in 1974, and the two research institutions have made complementary, independent observations ever since. Keeling’s son, geochemist Ralph Keeling, runs the Scripps program at Mauna Loa. 

“It's depressing that we've lacked the collective will power to slow the relentless rise in CO2,” said Keeling. “Fossil-fuel use may no longer be accelerating, but we are still racing at top speed towards a global catastrophe.”

The Mauna Loa data, together with measurements from sampling stations around the world, are incorporated by NOAA’s Global Monitoring Laboratory into the Global Greenhouse Gas Reference Network, a foundational research dataset for international climate scientists and a benchmark for policymakers attempting to address the causes and impacts of climate change.

Despite decades of negotiation, the global community has been unable to significantly slow, let alone reverse, annual increases in atmospheric CO2 levels. 

“Carbon dioxide is at levels our species has never experienced before — this is not new,” said Pieter Tans, senior scientist with the Global Monitoring Laboratory. “We have known about this for half a century, and have failed to do anything meaningful about it. What's it going to take for us to wake up?" 

To visualize how sea level rise may affect your community, visit NOAA’s sea level rise viewer, at: https://coast.noaa.gov/slr/

Media contact

Theo Stein, theo.stein@noaa.gov

Not much to comment on this is there?

The blog song for today is: "Dancing Days" by Led Zeppelin

TTFN

 

Tuesday, 21 June 2022

recycling 5ltr plastic water bottles, it's time to get out the scissors again!

 Here is the empty 5ltr bottle ready to be recycled.










First take off the label, it makes it easier to chop up.

I usually cut the bottle in half, then go for it!








The great thing about it is that it helps with two things: less to carry to the recycling bin (here they don't do door to door yet) and the other is that the big yellow bin does not get filled up too quickly! It is a real pain to walk there and find it is full up of empty 5ltr water bottles and not much else.  If we all chopped them up smaller it would benefit everyone, there wouldn't have to be so many collections (saving petrol which is really expensive) by the council,which means less pollution from the lorries collecting and less wear and tear on the roads.

The blog song for today is: " Ghosts" by Japan

TTFN

Friday, 17 June 2022

What Are VOCs and How Can You Avoid Them? a report from earth911.com

 

What Are VOCs and How Can You Avoid Them?

ByGemma Alexander

Jun 7, 2022 indoor air quality, Red List, VOCs
Man reads label on cleaning product in hardware store

Somewhere around the turn of the century, people began to realize that new car smell is actually an unhealthy combination of 50-60 VOCs off-gassing from plastics, vinyl, and glues. For a while, environmentalists paid a lot of attention to avoiding VOCs, but it’s hard to maintain attention these days.

The Federal Trade Commission is responsible for handling false advertising claims, but they have filed only two to five environmental marketing cases per year since 2015, which means that very few greenwashers are ever held accountable. Unfortunately, some companies have taken advantage of the lack of scrutiny to greenwash their products, as evidenced by one of those rare FTC legal actions. The FTC took action against YOLO Colorhouse for advertising their paints as no-VOC when that wasn’t true at all. Here’s why that’s a bigger problem than just false advertising.

What Are VOCs

VOC stands for “volatile organic compound.” Volatile organic compounds include a wide variety of chemicals that share two key characteristics. First, they are all emitted as gases from solids or liquids that contain them in a process called “off-gassing.” Second, they are all organic. In environmental circles, “organic” is usually a positive term that implies natural origin. But in chemistry, “organic” is a neutral term that refers to carbon-based compounds.

Organic chemicals include most of the compounds that make up living matter. Relatively few of them are volatile, but some such as methane and benzene are naturally occurring. But many other VOCs are manufactured chemicals that are rare in nature if they exist there at all. Regardless of their origin, VOCs work as industrial solvents, fuels, paint thinners, and dry-cleaning agents. They are also present in thousands of commercial products, from paints and paint strippers to cleaning supplies, pesticides, glues and permanent markers.

What’s Wrong With VOCs

VOCs, including formaldehyde, a variety of compounds found in paints and finishes, and some flame retardants, are on the Red List of materials green builders try to avoid. When released outdoors, VOCs react with nitrogen oxides in the air to form ozone pollution. Organic compounds in myriad chemical products become pollutants in groundwater, and volatile organics in many home products contribute significantly to indoor air pollution.

Organic pollutants can have short- and long-term adverse health effects. Because VOCs comprise such a widely varied group of compounds, their health impacts are also varied, but can include irritation of eyes, nose, and throat; difficulty breathing and nausea; central nervous system and other organ damage; and even cancer. The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry Toxic Substances Portal identifies specific health effects from different kinds of VOCs.

Indoor air quality can be two to five times worse than outside air quality. Concentrations of many harmful VOCs are up to 10 times higher indoors than outdoors. There are several remedies for indoor air quality at home, but one of the most important is source control.

cans of house paint
Before you start a house painting project, make sure you buy no-
VOC or low-VOC paint to minimize adverse health effects.

Avoiding VOCs

Choose cleaning products, solvents, glues, and paints that are labeled low-VOC or no-VOC. To avoid the kind of greenwashing revealed in the Colorhouse case, look for third-party certification. Unfortunately, there is no single certification system for VOCs. Paints and finishes may have one of several types of certification, including GreenGuard, Green Seal, and Indoor airPLUS. Green Seal also looks at the safety of cleaning products. Numerous other certification systems, such as MADESAFE, consider the safety or toxicity of ingredients in a wide variety of consumer products.

You can also avoid VOCs by choosing different types of products. Avoid anything made from vinyl (also known as PVC). Choose solid wood furnishings instead of upholstered ones and bare wood or tile floors instead of carpet to avoid the VOCs in foams.

Most off-gassing takes place when products are new and decreases over time. Buying second-hand is one way to avoid VOCs in soft furnishings and other products where VOCs may be unavoidable. When you must buy new products – for example, engineered woods bound with adhesives that contain VOCs – let the materials off-gas outdoors or in the garage before bringing them into the home.

Time remodeling and craft projects for summer so that you can keep doors and windows open while working. Completely avoiding VOCs in products is impossible when even computers and mattresses contain them. So, try to maintain good ventilation in your home at all times to remove any VOCs released. Off-gassing is more severe in high temperatures and high humidity, so keeping your home cool and dry is also helpful. Finally, communicate with the manufacturers of the products you buy and encourage them to offer low and no-VOC products.

The main problem I have noticed near where I live is that there is the facility to dispose of unused paints and stuff here but there is a big charge for it and most people just dump it wherever.  The complaint from these people is that they already pay the council to take the rubbish, why should they pay extra? Companies mainly put it in the green refuse bin,which is better I suppose than tipping it down the sink which people have been known to do.

 The blog song for today is: "Loop di Love" by Shag

TTFN

 

 

 

 


Saturday, 11 June 2022

More than 150,000 Europeans call on EU to ban bottom-trawling to protect ocean and climate - a report from Oceana.org

 

More than 150,000 Europeans call on EU to ban bottom-trawling to protect ocean and climate

Environmental NGOs present Commissioner Sinkevičius with giant pop-up storybook on how bottom-trawling impacts our marine environment

Press Release Date

Monday, December 20, 2021
Location: Brussels
Contact: Emily Fairless: efairless@oceana.org

A giant colourful pop-up book depicting the devastation caused by destructive bottom trawling - and how the marine environment thrives in its absence - was delivered to European Union (EU) Commissioner Virginijus Sinkevičius by NGOs this morning, on behalf of more than 150,000 Europeans who have signed a petition calling for the EU to phase out destructive fishing practices, starting with an immediate ban of bottom trawling in all Marine Protected Areas. [1]  

The tens of thousands of signatories are demanding that EU Commissioner Sinkevičius (responsible for the environment, ocean and fisheries) and EU Commission Executive Vice-president Frans Timmermans (responsible for the EU Green Deal) include a ban on bottom-trawling in the upcoming EU ‘Action plan to conserve fisheries resources and protect marine ecosystems’ (Ocean Action Plan), to be adopted next spring. Bottom trawling, the most harmful fishing method for the environment and climate, is widely used in Europe where it impacts more than 50% of the seabed, and even takes place inside Marine Protected Areas. 

Oceana, Seas At Risk, Our Fish, WeMove Europe, Whale and Dolphin Conservation, and Environmental Justice Foundation, delivered the 1.5m by 2.5m pop-up book, which features both Commissioners Sinkevičius and Timmermans embarking on an ocean adventure modeled on The Life Aquatic, a popular film which references the work of famous ocean explorer and conservationist Jacques-Yves Cousteau, outside the European Commission headquarters in Brussels. The book presents a story on how the EU has the chance to turn the tide on destructive fishing by banning bottom-trawling, through a journey from current underwater devastation to a healthy, thriving and resilient marine environment. 

Vera Coelho, Senior Director of Advocacy at Oceana in Europe said “Marine Protected Areas, as the name suggests, are supposed to afford protection to marine life, yet in 2020 over 2.5 million hours of bottom-trawling took place inside them. It is unacceptable that the EU continues condoning the destruction of the very places it has committed to protect. This madness can and must be fixed now, for good.” 

Tobias Troll, Marine Policy Director at Seas At Risk added “European citizens start to realise that the seas are fragile ecosystems that need protection because they are the life support system of the planet. Destructive fishing techniques like bottom trawling must end, inside marine protected areas but also beyond. We need a just transition to low impact fisheries to protect biodiversity and allow future generations of small scale fisherfolk and coastal communities to have a good life.” 

Rebecca Hubbard, Program Director, Our Fish said “We can’t just continue with pledges and promises forever - we are running out of time and every ton of carbon counts. It’s time that the EU got serious about transitioning out of destructive fishing methods such as bottom trawling, which produces CO2 emissions through burning fuel, releasing carbon stored in the seabed, and depleting fish populations, and instead secured a sustainable and resilient future for our climate, ocean and coastal communities.”  

Giulio Carini, Senior Campaigner, WeMove Europe said: “Almost half of the EU population lives within 50 kilometers of the sea, and no one wants to have a devastated and dead ocean for decades to come.”  

Steve Trent, CEO, Environmental Justice Foundation said: “As well as destroying ocean ecosystems, endangering wildlife, and threatening coastal livelihoods, bottom trawling is also hastening climate breakdown. This practice churns up the seabed, releasing vital stores of carbon that have lain safely locked away for centuries. It is gravely disappointing that the EU, which has led progressive efforts to improve sustainability in fisheries, still allows bottom trawling within protected areas. This must end now.

Background 

-   Bottom-contacting gear, including dredging and bottom trawling, is the most unselective and destructive fishing gear. The method involves dragging heavy weighted nets across the sea floor, indiscriminately catching all types of living creatures and habitats that happen to be on their way. Such trawling can strip up to 41% of invertebrate life from the sea-bed, and the ocean floor can take many years to recover. Its continuous use has led to drastic, and in some cases irreversible, degradation of marine ecosystems including habitats like corals and seagrass, as well as sensitive species like sharks, turtles and dolphins. Moreover, bottom trawling disturbs the seabed and releases large amounts of carbon stored in sediments into the sea - novel, early-stage research suggests a level of released carbon that would put it on par with the aviation sector (study). 

- Recent data by Oceana revealed how EU countries continue to allow destructive fishing in Europe’s Marine Protected Areas, with over 2.5 million hours of bottom fishing occurring in 2020 inside areas supposedly designated to protect Europe’s most valuable and threatened marine species and habitats. 

 

-    A socioeconomic analysis commissioned by Seas At Risk has revealed that a ban on bottom-contacting gear (bottom trawling and bottom dredging) in Marine Protected Areas would yield net benefits as soon as four years after the ban comes into force. 

-    The EU Action plan to conserve fisheries resources and protect marine ecosystems, announced in the EU 2030 Biodiversity Strategy, is expected in 2022. An EU public consultation is opened until December 20th.-

 We are all doing what we can as individuals but we are much stronger together! Keep up the good work all those wonderful people at Oceana, Seas At Risk, Our Fish, WeMove Europe, Whale and Dolphin Conservation, and Environmental Justice Foundation, along with many more!

The blog song for today is: "counting out time" by Genesis

TTFN

Wednesday, 8 June 2022

The Overlooked Root of Plastic Culture in the Food System- a report from :https://www.sierraclub.org/

      

The Overlooked Root of Plastic Culture in the Food System

Inside the scope of the plasticulture predicament—and what can be done about it

If you drive along California’s Central Coast, you will see the ocean on one side—and oceans of plastic on the other. This is according to Dr. Seeta Sistla, an assistant professor at California Polytechnic State University (Cal Poly). “It looks like the sea because it’s so many acres of plastic that have been put down,” says Sistla, the primary investigator on two multi-institution research grants studying biodegradable alternatives to plastic mulch in agriculture. “It’s absolutely astounding how much plastic use goes into producing food—plastic that’s then not functionally reusable. And it’s building up in our soils.”

When we consider plastic in the food system, packaging is usually top of mind. It’s the largest source of plastic waste globally, with a widely documented impact, especially in marine environments. But those clear berry clamshells, produce bags, yogurt containers, and Styrofoam meat trays lining grocery store shelves represent the very end of plastic’s journey from field to fork.

Widely used across agriculture and aquaculture sectors—from crops to forestry, livestock, and fishing, in organic, conventional, hydroponic, and soil-centered systems alike—plastic touches everything we eat. That’s because plasticulture—the application of plastics in agriculture—carries numerous benefits. Applied as mulch and weed blockers for produce, cover for fruit trees, and wrapping for hay bales, greenhouse liners, seed trays, slow-release fertilizers, irrigation systems, fishing nets, milking tubes, packing boxes, pesticide containers, and so much more, plastic has been increasingly utilized in agriculture since the 1950s. This versatile material helps boost efficiency and yields, reduce soil runoff, conserve water, deter pests, improve sanitation, preserve feeds, and avoid toxic herbicides, among other functions. It’s also a major source of pollution, one that may be damaging the very lifeblood of our food system: soil.

And consumers are largely unaware that strawberries, tomatoes, salad greens, and other produce are frequently grown in rows fitted with plastic sheeting, that bananas mature in pesticide-impregnated plastic bags, that polymer-coated seeds sprout from agricultural sites across the globe, and that modern fishing plainly wouldn’t exist without plastic.

“Landscapes hide plastic really well. We’ve sampled areas where it looks like there’s nothing there until you get down and look, and then there’s all these visible fragments and who knows how much microplastic,” says Sistla. “Our lab has found that there’s upwards of 10 to over 100,000 pieces of plastic per hectare left behind after clean removal of this material. And this is not because farmers are not being careful. . . . But if you use plastic year in, year out, for 20 years, you see an accumulation, even in really well-managed fields.”

“Landscapes hide plastic really well. We’ve sampled areas where it looks like there’s nothing there until you get down and look, and then there’s all these visible fragments and who knows how much microplastic.”

Despite its deep roots, plasticulture is often overlooked in mainstream discussions of sustainable agriculture (largely because of its non-visibility in the public eye), but researchers are increasingly discovering the practice poses real threats to the future of food security.

Late last year the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) issued A Call for Action concerning the long-term impact of plasticulture on terrestrial and aquatic environments and human health. The FAO found that in 2019 alone, 12.5 million tons of plastic products were used in plant and animal production, and another 37.3 million tons were used in food packaging. Most of those plastics are single-use and replaced annually, if not seasonally. Often possessing little recycling value, millions of tons end up in landfills or are incinerated, releasing microplastics into food, fields, air, and water all along the way.

Those plastic particles are known to scale the food web. Now they’re being found in roots and crops, and even making their way into human blood. Studies confirm that microplastic is altering soil composition too, disturbing the relationship between soil microbes—organisms essential to healthy earth and nutritious foods—along with soil’s ability to absorb water. That’s particularly alarming, given that scientists estimate agricultural soils may contain more microplastics than the oceans.

With over 90 percent of global agriculture taking place on land, finding alternatives to plastics in crop production is critical. 

Reducing Dependence and Increasing Alternatives 

Dr. Gladis Zinati, director of the Vegetable Systems Trial at Rodale Institute—a long-term study comparing vegetables grown in organic and conventional cropping systems side by side with various management practices—aims to link soil health, plant health, and nutrient density to human health. The trial, which began in 2016, implements intensive tillage with black plastic mulch and reduced tillage without plastic for both its conventional and organically grown crops.

Black plastic mulch is standard in organic and conventional farming practices; it’s used to control weeds, expedite production, and reduce tillage, herbicides, and labor. The FAO confirms that plastic films (such as mulches, greenhouse films, and silage wraps) represent 60 percent of all plasticulture. Despite their ubiquity, such plastics are difficult to recycle because of contamination from plant, soil, and pesticide residues. 

One way that farmers can get around this is by growing cover crops and using roller crimpers (a tractor attachment invented by Rodale that lays said crops onto the field, creating a dense carpet where sowed seeds flourish and weeds perish). The cropping method can supplant the use of over 90 pounds of plastic per acre. It’s also improving soil health. So far, the Vegetable Systems Trial has shown that both bacterial and fungal biomass (crucial microorganisms responsible for decomposing crop residues and building soil organic matter) are greater in the organic reduced-tillage beds—those that employ cover cropping and roller crimping instead of plastic. Zinati notes another important finding: These valuable soil generators weren’t just fewer in the plasticulture beds; their activity was also ultimately reduced by the hot environment created by the black plastic.

While the cropping system has obvious benefits, it may not be a fit for all operations. Straw, wood chips, paper, and even wool all provide additional substitutes to plastic mulch. Flame weeders are another long-standing tool, and Rodale is working on an electric weed zapper to snuff unwanted growth on vegetable fields. Zinati also recommends rotating crops to help build healthy soil and planting crops that grow quickly to outcompete weeds.

Biodegradable mulch (BDM) is yet another option, though it’s more costly and somewhat controversial. Sistla and her colleagues are working to better understand the viability of BDMs as a replacement for conventional polyethylene plastic, their use and utility in the field, and their impact on soil and crops.

“There are no deleterious effects that we can detect of using BDM on yield, or of the strawberries or quality of the strawberries,” says Sistla, whose research centers on the popular fruit. “So it seems like the BDM works well in the field. It’s extremely durable as well. The thicker BDMs, they’re not breaking down; they’re not falling apart during the growing season.”

While BDMs appear promising, Sistla is careful to make clear that “there’s no free lunch, even in the biodegradable world.” Language in this field can be confusing. “Just because it’s biodegradable doesn’t mean it's biologically derived,” she clarifies. Such mulches can be biobased (using natural materials like starch or cellulose), made from fossil fuels, or a mixture of the two, she notes. To be considered truly biodegradable by ASTM International, BDMs must be 90 percent mineralized or transformed into carbon dioxide under composting conditions within 180 days. If a mulch doesn’t meet that standard, it won’t break down effectively in fields, and if visible fragments are left behind, farmers won’t want to use it, Sistla explains.

Another barrier to adoption? BDMs are unusable on certified organic farms because the technology remains unable to meet the National Organic Program standards, which require BDMs to be 100 percent biobased, non-GMO, and compostable, and 90 percent biodegraded in soil within two years of application.

“There are benefits, but there are lots of disadvantages,” says Zinati, who remains concerned about the documented adverse effects of biodegradable plastics on soil. “These could impact the microbes. They can impact the soil structure, and the physical properties, and the chemistry.” That could lead to microorganisms spending more energy decomposing BDMs than providing plants with vital nutrients. As with conventional plastics, pollutants could leach from particles left behind, and the accelerated decomposition of BDMs could result in more littered soils, Zinati cautions. “Researchers have to do more in-depth work to trace and monitor the degradation of those biodegradable plastics and how they end up in the soil as well as in the harvestable crop.”

Sistla agrees that more research is needed to understand the long-term effects of biodegradable mulch on soil, crops, and human health—goals that constitute the essence of her studies. “We need to know more about how quickly these materials decompose in the field and whether they do have any effects on crop production,” says Sistla, adding that “if the feedstocks can be refined to be sustainable, biobased, . . . it could be really, really promising.”

While US farmers have been slower to adopt BDMs, the material is more commonly used in other parts of the world, notably Europe, where the European Committee for Standardization has developed standards around the use of biodegradable plastic and banned the use of OXO-degradable plastics, given their significant environmental risks, including increased microplastic pollution.

Further research, innovations, and regulations are needed for all agricultural plastics, including biodegradable and compostable substitutes, to safeguard essential soil and water systems for a growing population amid a changing climate, conditions under which plasticulture is only expected to increase.

Making a Difference: Promoting Visibility in a Complex Food Chain 

Thaddeus Barsotti, a second-generation organic farmer and the co-owner of Capay Organic, a 350-acre certified organic farm in Yolo County, California, selling fruits, vegetables, and some commodity crops, says plastic hasn’t increased all that much on his farm since it was founded in 1976, despite the global trend. Today the largest source is drip tape, a common irrigation tool that is particularly useful in arid climates. The farm replaces drip tape seasonally, as crops turn over, and recycles the material with the manufacturer, which provides on-farm pickup. “But when you move closer to the customer and away from the field,” says Barsotti, “you see a lot more plastics.” This is something he’s actively working to change. 

Though the farm sells both retail and directly to consumers via farmers’ markets and Farm Fresh to You (a CSA delivering approximately 20,000 boxes of food to subscribers per week), 95 percent of Capay Organic’s produce is found in grocery stores. “Unfortunately, even though consumers might say that they want plastic-free items, it’s hard to pull that through the whole food chain,” he explains, citing that reduction has been a challenge with his supermarket clients.

Barsotti is working to minimize plastic packaging by switching from plastic bib ties to paper and metal twist ties for bunched greens, swapping out plastic baskets for cardboard pints for cherry tomatoes, embracing biodegradable bags, and reducing plastic bag use in general through Farm Fresh to You. But “[wholesale] buyers don’t look at our product and give it any more value because it doesn’t have plastic,” he says. “In fact, I’ve heard the contrary: ‘Love your product. Needs to be in a two-pound plastic bag, or I can’t sell it.’ And that’s just the reality.”

“Right now we’re in a system where it is the norm,” says Sistla. “And there’s good reasons for it from a grower perspective. But if consumers were willing to pay twice as much for their berries if they weren’t growing with any plastic at all, that would be interesting to see.”

Though that may sound like a steep price tag, both Barsotti and Sistla highlight the importance of considering the economic externalities of plastic. “This is having a real cost to our society, but it’s not having an economic cost, so it’s getting ignored in our system,” says Barsotti. “It’s even being encouraged because the economic benefits of using plastic are so great.”

“This is having a real cost to our society, but it’s not having an economic cost, so it’s getting ignored in our system.”

Farmers and fishers can continue to move the needle on plastic reduction by making small changes that add up, like swapping plastic pots for cardboard, plastic harvest bags and Styrofoam fish boxes for reusable crates, and greenhouse films for glass and polycarbonate.

The FAO finds that action is also needed by business and policymakers in the form of improved product recyclability and broader access to recycling infrastructure; development of extended producer responsibility programs, in which companies are accountable for their products’ waste; investment in alternative materials, equipment, and systems approaches; product certifications and standards; and legislation, both nationally and internationally, including product and material bans. Global guidelines, incentives, and enforcement would also go a long way to reduce, reuse, and recycle agri-food plastics.

Widespread consumer awareness of plastic’s true presence in food production will be fundamental to making waves too. Individuals can take it further by supporting local farmers and fishers through farmers' markets and CSAs, discussing their concerns with growers, self-educating, and advocating for meaningful corporate, social, and governmental changes. The future of food depends on it.

I agree it is hard to buy fruit and vegetables in containers not made of plastic or covered with cling film (at least it is not all plastic), I like to buy loose and take my own bags with me.  Here in Menorca it is much easier to buy local produce but still there is a lot of plastic waste.

The blog song for today is: "Dream a little dream of me" by the Mamas and the Papas.

TTFN

Thursday, 2 June 2022

End Overfishing - We can do more! for more informatin visit: https://save.our.fish

 

 

 

 

 

  • We need to save the ocean to save the climate.

  • The ocean is our greatest ally in the fight against the climate crisis. A healthy ocean full of fish removes and stores carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, protecting us from the worst impacts of climate change.

  • The ocean is full of the most incredible wildlife on earth. From the smallest phytoplankton to the biggest whale, life in the ocean is beautiful and mysterious. But these species do not just inspire awe and wonder, they play a vital role for our planet too. An ocean teeming with life captures and stores carbon dioxide, thereby reducing the impacts of climate change. Fish are not the only marine creatures that do this, but they are among the most prolific. The more fish in the sea, the less climate change in the world.

  • The ocean is grossly overfished using methods that fundamentally damage it. On land, we know that if you cut down trees you need to plant more. Overfishing is like bulldozing the entire forest.

  • Overfishing is a human rights problem, a food security problem, and a global justice problem. And it worsens the impact of the climate crisis, which drives all of those problems too. If we are to survive, we must end overfishing and look after the biodiversity of our oceans.

  • The climate crisis is complicated, but action doesn’t have to be. Stopping overfishing is a straightforward, positive action that can make a huge difference in the fight to tackle climate change.

  • The laws and policies we pass now can protect the ocean and the planet for future generations. There are simple steps decision makers can take to end overfishing today, which will protect us tomorrow and into the future.

Facts & figures

  • The ocean contributes almost half of the annual primary production on Earth - it's a massive ecosystem, not just a body of water!

  • The ocean covers over 70% of Earth, ​​produces up to 50% of the oxygen we breathe, and is responsible for absorbing over 90% of manmade heat; without it the temperature on Earth would be 35 degrees hotter!

  • Marine sediments form the largest pool of organic carbon on Earth, which is estimated to store about 38 trillion metric tons of carbon. The carbon stored by the top layer of marine sediments is nearly double the amount contained in all terrestrial surface soils.

  • Marine species, as part of the ocean’s carbon pump, have an indispensable role in mitigating climate change. An ocean teeming with life allows for carbon sequestration; specifically, it has been estimated that fish contribute to 16% of total ocean carbon flux.

  • Overfishing is damaging ocean ecosystems and weakening the ocean’s ability to continue absorbing carbon and heat.

  • The fishing sector’s carbon footprint is magnified when bottom trawling disturbs carbon retained in seafloor sediment. Dragging heavy nets along the seafloor re-releases CO2, which may have been sequestered for millennia. European seas are the most heavily trawled in the world.

  • Climate change is further accelerated through fuel consumption by EU fishing fleets, which account for nearly 7.3 million tons of CO2 emissions per year.

Solutions

The EU can harness ocean-based solutions by minimising industrial trawling and improving its fisheries management, and thereby significantly and specifically mitigate the climate emergency.

  • Remove subsidies that fuel overfishing and climate breakdown, such as fuel tax subsidies.

  • Set an Action Plan to eliminate the climate and ecosystem impacts of destructive fishing with thorough impact assessments.

  • Initiate a just transition to low-impact, low-carbon fishing by allocating fishing quota to those who fish the most sustainably and responsibly.

  • Name and deliver on sustainable fisheries as a significant climate action in UN forums like the UN Framework Convention for Climate Change.

    We have to keep up the pressure because if we don't things will get worse.

    The blog song for today is: "Moby Dick" by Led Zeppelin

    TTFN

Recycling - How to break down TetraPak - all you need are: scissors,sharp fingernails and 10minutes: it is not easy!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Take the empty container and cut it into manageable pieces. Then carefully peel the paper from the silver backing.









Remove the plastic lid - One piece for recycling!








Impossible task - peeling off the plastic coating around the lid








The silver stuff (i am still not sure what it is)

After 10 minutes this is the end result! 

This is the problem with tetraPak.  It makes the content of the packs easy to store but afterwards difficult to dispose of.

Another point is that if I decide to buy milk in plastic bottles (there is nothing available in glass) then the price is nearly double, so it raises the weekly food shop bill by quite a lot for a family of 4 (for example).  At the moment because of one thing or another the cost of living is high and most people are naturally buying the cheaper things.  

Cutting down on dairy is another option! 

The blog song for today is: "The grand parade of lifeless packaging" by Genesis

TTFN


"Precyclying" - a short explanation from the gang at earth911.com

A report by: Taylor Ratcliffe, he is Earth911's customer support and database manager. He is a graduate of the University of Washington....