How To Rid Your Life Of Plastic

The earth is being choked by plastic. But it is never too late to act. Starting now, every single step you and I take to combat it, however small, will be priceless

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The earth is being choked by plastic. But it is never too late to act. Starting now, every single step you and I take to combat it, however small, will be priceless

It’s been a decade since I went to the Puri beach in Odisha. On my last visit, I was shocked to see how this vacation hotspot had transformed. Plastic refuse winded all the way down to the shoreline; the road looped around numerous heaps of garbage—mostly plastic debris. The staff in two nearby eateries expressed helplessness at the sordid state of affairs: Despite the presence of large signs to discourage littering, visitors evidently preferred to dispose used plastic cups and bottles on the road than in trash bins dotting the area.

I recalled my unfortunate Puri experience while reading about state-sponsored clean-up campaigns, such as the Swachh Bharat Abhiyan, and wondered how bad the situation could likely be in other parts of the world. I decided to dig deeper, and what I found wasn’t encouraging at all.

Humans have produced an estimated 8.3 billion tons of newly manufactured plastic, according to a 2017 article in Science Advances. Currently, around one million plastic bottles are purchased across the globe every minute and 20,000 plastic bottles are produced every second, The Guardian reported last year. Recycling efforts are simply unable to keep up with this frenetic rate of production and consumption, resulting in a staggering 91 per cent of plastic remaining unrecycled.

Where does all this waste go? Are they incinerated? Are they simply dumped out of sight? The Guardian article also reported that 79 per cent of globally generated plastic ends up in landfills. What’s really alarming is that plastic can take between 450 and 1,000 years to decompose, poisoning the environment and living creatures in the process.

Our oceans and marine life are bearing the brunt of it as well. Between 5 and 14 million tons of plastic waste are found in and around coastal regions, and most of it comes through rivers in Asia. A study by the Ellen MacArthur Foundation further predicts...

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