June 18, 2009
The seas of plastic…
Want to learn more about plastic bottles, plastic bags, plastic bottle caps, and the Pacific Garbage Patch?  Go to this TED Talk by Charles Moore.
Lest you begin to sink into a plastic depression, view some lovely uses of plastic bottle caps HERE and HERE and HERE.

The seas of plastic…

Want to learn more about plastic bottles, plastic bags, plastic bottle caps, and the Pacific Garbage Patch?  Go to this TED Talk by Charles Moore.

Lest you begin to sink into a plastic depression, view some lovely uses of plastic bottle caps HERE and HERE and HERE.

Comments (View)
April 2, 2009
It’s twice the size of Texas. It’s made mostly of plastic. It floats within the North Pacific sub-tropical gyre, in a slow circular current….
It’s the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, or the Trash Vortex.
Why you should care:

70% of the garbage in the ocean is on the sea floor. This means that the island is only a fraction of the garbage problem.
90% of ocean garbage is plastic. 
The plastic doesn’t break down chemically, it only breaks into smaller and smaller pieces. Eventually, the pieces become small enough to move into the food chain. 
Most of the garbage that ends up in the ocean comes from land. It’s simple, really: trash travels over land, into the streams, and out to the ocean. Our garbage - yours and mine - is ending up in the ocean. 

But wait! Before you dive into the depressed black hole of eco-stress … you can take steps and make a difference!
What you can do:

Use less plastic. This really is possible! Check out Life Less Plastic and PlasticLess.
Recycle everything that you possibly can.
Go out tomorrow and clean up a stream near you.

To learn more:


Stuff You Should Know - a podcast about recycling and the garbage island
Article from Discover Magazine

Greenpeace website

BBC article about plastic pieces

It’s twice the size of Texas. It’s made mostly of plastic. It floats within the North Pacific sub-tropical gyre, in a slow circular current….

It’s the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, or the Trash Vortex.

Why you should care:

  • 70% of the garbage in the ocean is on the sea floor. This means that the island is only a fraction of the garbage problem.
  • 90% of ocean garbage is plastic.
  • The plastic doesn’t break down chemically, it only breaks into smaller and smaller pieces. Eventually, the pieces become small enough to move into the food chain.
  • Most of the garbage that ends up in the ocean comes from land. It’s simple, really: trash travels over land, into the streams, and out to the ocean. Our garbage - yours and mine - is ending up in the ocean.

But wait! Before you dive into the depressed black hole of eco-stress … you can take steps and make a difference!

What you can do:

  • Use less plastic. This really is possible! Check out Life Less Plastic and PlasticLess.
  • Recycle everything that you possibly can.
  • Go out tomorrow and clean up a stream near you.

To learn more:

Comments (View)
November 17, 2008
How long does it take to biodegrade?
Paper … 2 to 5 months
Orange peel … 6 months
Plastic bag … 10 to 20 years
Aluminum/tin can … 50 to 100 years
Battery … 100 years
Glass bottle … 1 million years
Plastic soda bottle … never biodegrades
Styrofoam (polystyrene) … never biodegrades

How long does it take to biodegrade?

Paper … 2 to 5 months

Orange peel … 6 months

Plastic bag … 10 to 20 years

Aluminum/tin can … 50 to 100 years

Battery … 100 years

Glass bottle … 1 million years

Plastic soda bottle … never biodegrades

Styrofoam (polystyrene) … never biodegrades

Comments (View)