ioc.exchange is one of the many independent Mastodon servers you can use to participate in the fediverse.
INDICATORS OF COMPROMISE (IOC) InfoSec Community within the Fediverse. Newbies, experts, gurus - Everyone is Welcome! Instance is supposed to be fast and secure.

Administered by:

Server stats:

1.3K
active users

#plastic

74 posts58 participants5 posts today

Terwijl de wereld steeds meer #plastic gebruikt, worden de gevolgen daarvan steeds duidelijker. Niet alleen voor het #milieu, dat tot aan de poolregio's toe wordt vervuild met (micro)plastics, maar ook voor onze gezondheid.

Jaarlijks levert plastic al meer dan 1.000 miljard euro aan #gezondheidsschade op, schreven wetenschappers deze week in een overzichtsartikel in medisch tijdschrift The Lancet.

nu.nl/klimaat/6364866/komt-er-

NU · Komt er nu wél een wereldwijd plasticverdrag? 'Crisis loopt uit de hand'Na een jarenlang proces hopen landen het volgende week eens te worden over een wereldwijd verdrag om plasticvervuiling aan te pakken. In Genève zijn de onderhandelingen inmiddels losgebarsten om dit groeiende probleem te beteugelen.

Today’s “Post” from the #SaturdayPaper summarises what’s the go about International plans for #plastic.

recently i mentioned we should ban plastic bottles. a web-search for Guardian+Plastic+CocaCola will provide links to lots of articles about the scale of this problem. coca cola became a worldwide hit long before plastic bottles became standard, and it could revert to glass quite successfully if we had the political will to demand it.

on the other hand, i don’t believe an immediate and total ban on all plastics is practical — just one example is that the plastic wrap used to store silage is an important part of the food supply chain. it will take time and further effort to transition away from ALL plastics without putting lots of people at risk of hunger or malnutrition [as if low wages, urban design etc aren’t already bad enough] — but this doesn’t mean we should do nothing about plastic at all
———
US fights plastic production caps

As talks to develop a global treaty combating plastic pollution continue, the Trump administration has circulated a memo in direct opposition of more than 100 countries supporting the proposed measures.
The talks, which began in Geneva on Tuesday, involve almost 180 countries and are scheduled to run for 10 days, aiming to create a legally binding instrument to reduce plastic solutions (SBS).
The delegations for several countries received letters from the US, urging them to reject limits on plastic production (Reuters).
“We will not support impractical global approaches such as plastic production targets or bans and restrictions on plastic additives or plastic products – that will increase the costs of all plastic products that are used throughout our daily lives,” the memo sent by the US delegation read.
Ahead of the negotiations, The Lancet reported that 8000 megatonnes of plastic now pollute the planet, posing a grave health risk (ABC).
A report released by the UN Environment Programme in 2023, outlined that re-orientating the plastics market towards circularity, as opposed to single use, could eliminate plastic pollution by up to 80% by 2040 (The Saturday Paper).

Do plastic food containers cause #microplastics to end up in your food? Yes, they can. Especially if there are aging, are heated a lot, are damaged, etc.
It doesn't hurt to transfer stuff to glass containers. though #plastic lids and silicon seals can degrade and shed microplastics or other chemicals (but way less than if the whole container is plastic).
To reduce my overall #microplastic intake, I transfer much of the food I buy to glass containers (many of which are glass jam, salsa, pickle jars, that I clean and reuse).
For liquids like cooking oil and Ribena which sit on my shelf for months at a time -- these, I transfer to wine bottles.
Beware: canola oil looks like pino grigio so be careful which one you pour into your wine glass!

foodfacts.org/articles/should-

www.foodfacts.orgShould you throw out all your plastic containers? A fact-check on microplastics and kitchen safety | Fact Check | Foodfacts.orgYes, plastic kitchenware can release microplastics after intensive use, but that doesn't mean that you need to throw out your plastic utensils!

agent orange’s regime demands that the world continue expanding #plastic production

"We will not support impractical global approaches such as plastic production targets or bans and restrictions on plastic additives or plastic products — that will increase the costs of all plastic products that are used throughout our daily lives"

#PlasticPollution #PlasticPoisons #BiodiversityLoss #FascistAmeriKKKa japantimes.co.jp/environment/2

De olielanden blijven iedere vooruitgang in de onderhandelingen in Genève over plasticvervuiling blokkeren. Na twee dagen zijn de verschillende partijen verwikkeld in een “dovemansgesprek”, zegt een diplomatieke bron uit een van de ambitieuze landen woensdagavond.

“Op dit moment wordt er niets bereikt”, zei een vertegenwoordiger van een van de 170 landen die sinds dinsdag deelnemen aan de onderhandelingen. “We staan tegenover landen die alles blokkeren.” #plastic
knack.be/nieuws/milieu/doveman

Knack · "Dovemansgesprek" op onderhandelingen over plasticvervuiling in Genève"Op dit moment wordt er niets bereikt", zei een vertegenwoordiger van een van de 170 landen die sinds dinsdag deelnemen aan de onderhandelingen. "We staan

914 #ClimateEmergency #Plastics #Waste

If you don't want to see your problem, just dump it somewhere far away; right ?

"Ban of #plastic reduce #plasticpollution in a #planet taken over by plastics #ourplanet #ourearth" [ ± 1-3 min]
by D2E
----- for a bit longer version on this topic, watch:
---> Banning problematic plastics may save the world up to $8 trillion by 2040 <- [3:45 min]
---> youtube.com/watch?v=cptgtPG1Md0 <-

youtube.com/shorts/y0WAK1KGbqI

Quote by D2E, the short version:
"Jul 18, 2025
A new global study shows that banning problematic plastic products could result in economic savings ranging from $4.7 to $8 trillion between 2025 and 2040, with certain limitations and restrictions. The research, conducted by Earth Action focuses on plastics that are most likely to end up polluting the environment like expanded polystyrene packaging, PVC, single-use straws and cotton buds.
The study finds that an immediate global ban would be more effective and more economical in the long term than slowly phasing them out. WWF defines problematic plastics as “those with a high likelihood of ending up in the environment and potentially harmful impacts on the environment and human health.” There are short-term transition costs, but the long-term savings far outweigh them. These would come from lower waste management costs, fewer greenhouse gas emissions, mismanaged waste and other associated social and environmental impacts.
Currently, the world produces about 430 million tonnes of plastic every year. Of this, 280 million tonnes becomes waste, and 22 percent is mismanaged, meaning it ends up in the environment instead of being properly disposed of.
If countries take action, global plastic use could drop by up to 224 million tonnes, and mismanaged waste could fall by as much as 74 million tonnes by 2040. The faster the action, the greater the benefits.
Hanna Dijkstra, environmental consultant at Earth Action, explains how the estimates were built. “We modelled different policy scenarios to forecast how much plastic would be produced and consumed under each,” she says. “Then we built cost models to reflect the financial impact of each scenario - including public, private, and social costs.”
Under the business-as-usual scenario (where the plastic production continues along current trends), the global cost of plastic production and use would be around $10 trillion by 2040. But an immediate ban would bring that down to $2 trillion, saving $8 trillion overall.
A slower phase-out would save $7 trillion, while staggered action by richer and poorer countries would save $4.7 trillion - the least effective of the three.
An immediate ban would come with the highest administrative cost at $323 million, but it would also reduce waste management expenses by $50 billion, making it well worth the effort.
Businesses may face transition costs of around $143 million, and a drop in plastic market value of $228 billion. But the study notes that these figures don’t account for the new opportunities in reusable products, circular systems, and sustainable alternatives.
In fact, the private sector stands to gain more than it loses, as new markets emerge. Banning problematic plastics is not just good for the planet - it makes strong economic sense too."

#MAPA #TakeCareForLife #TakeCareForEarth
#StopBurningThings #StopEcoside
#StopThePlunder #StopRapingNature
#ClimateBreakDown

OK, look: We DEFINITELY have a #plastic problem, but d'you know how much 1% of 8bn is? 80 million. This is an important proof of concept, because that's WAY too much to be a gimmick.

Also, the goal isn't #recycling, it's replacement. If we Thanos'ed plastics away today, 10s of millions of people would be dead by the end of the month; we need new materials to do most of plastics' job - there's so much more to it than packaging.

Recycling has to go hand in hand with R&D.

vis.social/@infobeautiful/1149

A Sankey diagram shows how a total of the 8.3 billion tonnes of plastic ever produced by humanity has ended up either being totally discarded, incinerated or still in use. 31% are still in use.  The remainder have been dumped or burnt.
vis.socialInformation Is Beautiful (@infobeautiful@vis.social)Attached: 1 image Guess what % of plastics have been #recycled? No prizes :(