Solutions

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Tree Growing Plastic Fruit?


The last time I was in Hawaii, I was told to go to the windward side of the island, there I would find the plastic debris floating in like seaweed.  I knew I found my destination when I saw the Plastic Fruit Tree.  Someone went to great pains to create this work of plastic art.  I studied it from every angle then began looking further down the coastline.  Sure enough, as I walked, I watched the plastic roll in like dead seaweed.

This past week in the C&EN  Magazine - Chemical and Engineering News published by the American Chemical Society, had an article titled, "Perserving Plastic Art." Ironically, plastics designed to be "everlasting," do not keep well in museums.  Apparently, the best place to "get rid of plastic" is in art museums.   "Oxygen, light, and water in the air" cause the plastics to breakdown. and while doing so, "Sometimes the breakdown molecules float over to nearby artifacts, inciting corrosion, staining, or degradation."   If plastic is doing this in museums, what is it doing sitting in our food closets?  Where are the chemicals leaching, into our food, into us?  Could the chemical "corrosion" be another factor to why "1 of 2 men; 1 of 3 women will develop some type of cancer in their lifetime," according to American Cancer Society.  The more I learn about plastic, the more I am convinced that our food should NOT be touching it or even near it. 



After learning this, it also made me think  of how we typically dispose of plastic.  Most of it we bury in landfills where it has none of the  necessary elements for it to breakdown. (Of course breaking down does NOT mean going away). And then there is a large portion of it in our oceans where clearly there is plenty of O2, water, and light to break it down.  The ocean, were this very processes is wreaking havoc on our marine life. 


This only confirms my push to not use plastic.  If we must use it, then recycle or burn it for energy.   We should refrain from DRINKing and EATing things in plastic.  Buy local foods at farmers markets and Co-Ops.  Buy in bulk food sections.  Lots of times you can  bring your own glass, steel, or ceramic containers to fill, and you will eat better.  I know how difficult it is to not buy food in plastic but by taking this one step you won't need to be on a diet.  Furthermore, reducing your use of plastics will most definitely reduce the chemical load on your body because most foods packaged in plastic contain ingredients you cannot even read.  And what you don't know can hurt you.

3 comments:

  1. Ok... so Aaron and I were just talking about this at lunch. I, like you, said, "What is it doing to our food??" THEN... Aaron said... "what is it doing to us??" If plastics are breaking down in museums... doesn't that mean they're breaking down in our homes?? If so, what is happening when those same breakdown molecules attach directly to us? *sigh*

    There are SO many unanswered questions about plastics... I feel like I may need to clean out some stuff...

    Thank you so much for sharing this... it's really really really making me think about so many things...

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  2. We need more people like you and Aaron to help create change.

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