-
+14 +1
Plastic Eating Bacteria - Reengineering for Efficiency
Scientists show how re-engineering enzymes from a plastic eating bacteria, can provide us new avenues in plastic degradation.
-
+12 +1
Let’s end disposable plastic containers in Canada
Plastic can be useful. Disposable plastic is almost always wasteful. Canadians, it’s your turn to make a difference and put an end to disposable, single-use plastics in Canada.The government of
-
+17 +1
City garbage collection is finally getting the disruption it deserves
Stockholm and Bergen are among dozens of cities ditching trash cans in favor of vacuum chutes that woosh waste away through a series of underground pipes.
-
+3 +1
Plastic Keeps Polluting Our Planet - This 40 Second Cartoon Shows You Why
Plastic pollution has become one the most pressing environmental problems, as rapidly increasing production of disposable plastic products is devouring the planet – leaving traces all over nature and natural habitats. For way too long, the debate around plastic pollution has been dominated by the conversation about how consumers can change their habits and improve waste sorting.
-
+6 +1
Walmart to Cut 60,000 Pounds of Plastic Annually with One Simple Change to Its Cucumbers
By switching to plastic-free Apeel English cucumbers—which feature a plant-based, life-extending “peel”—the major retailer is eliminating the equivalent of 85 million plastic straws.
-
+25 +1
Plastic waste entering oceans expected to triple in 20 years
Plastic waste flowing into the oceans is expected to nearly triple in volume in the next 20 years, while efforts to stem the tide have so far made barely a dent in the tsunami of waste, research shows.
-
+3 +1
How the World’s Largest Garbage Dump Evolved Into a Green Oasis
The radical fix for a noxious landfill in Staten Island: Bury the trash, plant some grass and do nothing for 20 years.
-
+3 +1
Top 10 bad products we buy that are destroying our planet
Everything we buy has an impact on the environment. But some things bring us little value, even if they are "convenient"…and some of those are pure waste! So why buy them in the first place?
-
+14 +1
‘A huge step forward.’ Mutant enzyme could vastly improve recycling of plastic bottles
Recycling isn’t as guilt-free as it seems. Only about 30% of the plastic that goes into soda bottles gets turned into new plastic, and it often ends up as a lower strength version. Now, researchers report they’ve engineered an enzyme that can convert 90% of that same plastic back to its pristine starting materials. Work is underway to scale up the technology and open a demonstration plant next year.
-
+4 +1
Coca-Cola is again rated as the most polluted brand in the world
This marks the second consecutive year that Coca-Cola has become the most polluted brand in the world. Other companies identified as major global polluters include Solo Cup and Colgate-Palmolive. In the United States, Nestlé is the most polluted company, followed by Solo Cup and Starbucks. Recently, several large companies announced their commitment to more sustainable practices. However, garbage seems to be still accumulating. Why is this?
-
+2 +1
The mattress landfill crisis: how the race to bring us better beds led to a recycling nightmare
As the sleep economy grows, companies vie to sell us new mattresses, offering 100-day returns. This has helped create an impossible waste mountain – and a wild west of rogue recyclers...
-
+4 +1
The Big Debate: Should single-use plastics be banned?
Plastic bans are increasing around the world, a necessary step to save our environment, writes Sarah King of Greenpeace Canada. Angela Logomasini of the Competitive Enterprise Institute argues that, although well meaning, such bans create more problem than they solve.
-
+22 +1
Company Collects 80% of City's Recyclable Plastics and Turns It All into Lumber
This trailblazing Canadian company is building a new standard for sustainability since they started recycling the bulk of their municipal plastic waste into lumber. Roughly 80% of the plastic recyclables collected throughout Halifax, Nova Scotia are now being processed by Goodwood Plastic Products Ltd so they can be turned into building blocks.
-
+13 +1
How Fossil Fuel Companies Are Killing Plastic Recycling
So many things we buy come packaged in plastic containers or wrappers that are meant to be used once, thrown away and forgotten ― but they don’t break down and can linger in the environment long after we’re gone. It’s tempting to think that we can recycle this problem away, that if we’re more diligent about placing discarded bottles and bags into the curbside bin, we’ll somehow make up for all the trash overflowing landfills, choking waterways and killing marine life.
-
+4 +1
Exposing The Myth Of Plastic Recycling: Why A Majority Is Burned Or Thrown In A Landfill
Very little of plastic we recycle is actually removed from the waste stream.
-
+8 +1
BAVARIA, Container Ship - Here's how to track the Canadian garbage that's making its way home from the Philippines.
It's about time.
-
+2 +1
Here’s how much plastic you might be eating every day
Researchers have estimated the amount of microplastics Americans might be consuming every day.
-
+29 +1
People eat at least 50,000 plastic particles a year, study finds
The average person eats at least 50,000 particles of microplastic a year and breathes in a similar quantity, according to the first study to estimate human ingestion of plastic pollution. The true number is likely to be many times higher, as only a small number of foods and drinks have been analysed for plastic contamination. The scientists reported that drinking a lot of bottled water drastically increased the particles consumed.
-
+6 +1
Developing nations can now legally refuse plastic waste from rich countries
The world generated 242 million tonnes of plastic waste in 2016 – a figure that’s expected to grow by 70% in the next 30 years. But this same plastic is also a commodity that’s sold and traded in a global industry that generates US$200 billion every year. Exporting plastic waste is one way rich countries dispose of their waste. By selling waste to firms that then send it to countries where recycling costs are cheaper, rich countries can avoid the unpleasant task of finding somewhere at home to dispose of it.
-
+10 +1
Canada's garbage to be removed from the Philippines by end of June
A shipment of illegal garbage that ended up in the Philippines nearly six years ago will be returned to Canada by the end of June 2019.
Submit a link
Start a discussion