Dear teachers,

Scary mail ...about the use of plastic bottles...


*Let us completely stop using bottled water / 'mineral water' and tell our
students about the dangers of plastic to environment. Carry your own steel
water bottle .... always and refuse bottled water ....*
regards,
Guru
IT for Change

Source - Source -
https://www.nationofchange.org/2017/07/09/latest-figures-reveal-that-the-world-uses-500-billion-plastic/

Latest figures reveal that the world uses 500 billion plastic bottles
annually

Plastic bottles will soon take over the entire Earth, literally.   By
Brianna Acuesta -
July 9, 2017 | News Analysis

*Plastic is plaguing the environment left and right and one of the single
biggest contributors is the use of single-use plastic bottles. This
includes water bottles and those used for other beverages, like sodas and
sugary sports drinks, and the demand for them is only increasing despite
global efforts to stem plastic usage in the bud.*

Plastic bags and bottles ravage the Earth from production to disposal, and
yet* humans buy approximately one million bottles per minute*, according to
Euromonitor, a market research group. Those numbers are expected to
increase by another 20% by 2021, which will devastate climate, beaches,
oceans, and all of the animals that reside in these areas.

According to figures from Euromonitor, humans bought 480 billion plastic
bottles in the year 2016, which is 300 billion more than the numbers from a
decade ago. To make matters worse, less than half of those bottles was
collected for recycling and only about 7% of those collected were turned
into new bottles. Manufacturers complain that using recycled plastic ruins
the appeal of the bottles and that it costs more to use these materials,
which will fall on the consumer.

Experts speculate that this demand for 20,000 bottles per second has been
exacerbated by the on-the-go, urban culture that has taken over in cities
in China and the Asia Pacific region. With an increased population comes a
rise in the demand for PET (polyethylene terephthalate) bottles, which is
why Chinese citizens bought 73.8 billion bottles last year, up more than 5
billion since the year before it.  “[China] is a critical country to
understand when examining global sales of plastic PET bottles, and China’s
requirement for plastic bottles continues to expand,” said Euromonitor’s
head of packaging, Rosemary Downey.

It’s not enough that reusable water bottles are trending right now because
that doesn’t help the nations who can’t trust the cleanliness of their tap
water. This surge in buying plastic bottles is also largely driven by
developing countries, where disposability is more important than
sustainability and being eco-friendly.   “This increase is being driven by
increased urbanization,” Downey said. “There is a desire for healthy living
and there are ongoing concerns about groundwater contamination and the
quality of tap water, which all contribute to the increase in bottle water
use.”


*If municipalities would clean up their water or work to provide safe
drinking water to certain regions for the first time, it’s likely that
plastic pollution, especially when it comes to bottles, would decline
dramatically and slow the environmental health crisis that is building
every day.*
Sadly, it’s estimated that approximately 5 to 13 million tons of plastic
leak into the ocean every single year, ultimately to be worn down into
fragments that float in the water column and can sometimes become a part of
one of the many garbage patches. Fish, sea birds, and other marine life
will eat the specks of plastic or even consume larger pieces, which can
eventually kill them. Since humans consume a variety of fish from the
ocean, these plastics can also make their way onto our dinner plates. “The
plastic pollution crisis rivals the threat of climate change as it pollutes
every natural system and an increasing number of organisms on planet
Earth,” said Hugo Tagholm, the CEO of Surfers Against Sewage. “Current
science shows that plastics cannot be usefully assimilated into the food
chain. Where they are ingested they carry toxins that work their way on to
our dinner plates.”

There are several solutions that groups and experts have suggested to
reduce the number of plastic bottle usage, ranging from cutting bottles out
cold turkey to encouraging a payment system to use plastic bottles. While
some places, like San Francisco, banned the sale of plastic bottles, other
groups advocate for what’s called a circular economy. In the circular
economy, plastic bottles would be used, recycled, refilled, and reused,
effectively reducing waste. Surfers Against Sewage is currently campaigning
for a deposit return system to be implemented in the U.K., which the
equivalent of CRV that is collected in the U.S. that can be returned to
people that recycle their bottles or cans.

If you aren’t compelled by these reasons to stop using plastic bottles,
consider what your beaches will look like once plastic dominates the world
even more. Remote islands with little to no beach clean-ups have shown
evidence of extreme pollution along their coast and upwards of 18 tons on
their beaches, revealing what the future of even the nicest beaches will
be. *Consider purchasing a reusable water bottle today and making a huge
difference for the environment.*




IT for Change, Bengaluru
www.ITforChange.net

On Fri, Nov 18, 2016 at 12:01 PM, Gurumurthy K <itfc.stfk...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> Bottled water is one of the biggest threat to our environment. Let us stop
> using bottled water and let us educate our students also to avoid it
> always. We can carry our own water bottles and fill from water sources.
> read article below, it is for the National Parks in USA but equally
> applicable to us also ... In USA, the bottled water manufacturers are
> lobbying the government to stop any law banning bottled water!!
>
> regards
> Guru
>
> *Why Ban Plastic Water Bottles in National Parks?*
>
> The United States' national parks are popular. So popular, in fact, that
> the National Park Service is having significant challenges dealing with the
> waste generated by the hundreds of millions of people that make their way
> through 85 million acres of national park land every year.
>
> In 2015, more than 305 million people visited
> <https://www.nps.gov/aboutus/news/release.htm?id=1775> national parks,
> easily eclipsing the all-time visitation record that the National Park
> Service recorded in 2014. Around 365 of 409 parks recorded record
> visitation numbers, and park officials see no reason to believe this trend
> will not continue.
>
> Three hundred million people produce a lot of waste: over 100 million
> pounds per year
> <https://www.npca.org/articles/1292-study-reveals-lack-of-awareness-of-waste-challenges-facing-us-national>,
> much of which consists of single-use plastic water bottles. To the
> companies that bottle and sell water, often at over 2,000 times the cost
> of tap water
> <http://www.businessinsider.com/bottled-water-costs-2000x-more-than-tap-2013-7>,
> those three hundred million people represent hundreds of millions of
> opportunities to sell their product and, at an average of $1.50 per bottle,
> billions of dollars in revenue.
>
> In the first half of this decade, national parks started to take proactive
> steps to address the challenges that come along with more visitors, more
> waste and more impact to the landscape and wildlife. Park service officials
> were finding that one of the largest sources of trash in the parks was
> single-use plastic water bottles.
> <http://www.peer.org/news/news-releases/park-plastic-bottle-bans-work-but-remain-few-and-far-between.html>
>
> For a decade, Gina Macllwraith lived and worked in many of this country's
> national parks, including Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona and Grand
> Teton National Park in Wyoming. Her job was to make the parks more
> sustainable for the companies that provide food and lodging and other
> services to park visitors.
>
> a huge part of the waste stream," Macllwraith said. "There are so many
> bottles it's ridiculous. It is a major challenge and it makes me mad that
> [IBWA is] trying to prevent parks from dealing with it."
>
> In the parks where Macllwraith worked, they eliminated single-use plastic
> water bottles and instead provided water stations and extremely affordable
> reusable bottles for visitors.
>
> "We made sure we had a wide variety of price points so it wasn't
> prohibitive to people to buy a reusable container. We made it to be as
> cheap as buying a disposable bottle of water," she said.
>
> Zion National Park in Utah was the first to ban single-use plastic water
> bottles
> <https://www.nps.gov/sustainability/parks/downloads/GPP%20Success_ZION_bottles_4_17_12.pdf>,
> followed shortly by Grand Canyon National Park. Twenty others soon
> followed. And, according to National Park Service data, the bans worked.
> <http://www.peer.org/news/news-releases/park-plastic-bottle-bans-work-but-remain-few-and-far-between.html>
>
> In Arches and Canyonlands National Park in Utah officials saw a 15 percent
> reduction in their total waste stream and a 25 percent reduction in the
> amount of material they had to haul to be recycled. In Grand Canyon
> National Park in Arizona they saw a 20 percent reduction in their waste
> stream and a 30 percent reduction in their recycling load and in Saguaro
> National Park they had a 15 percent total waste reduction and a 40 percent
> reduction in their recycling load.
>
> A recent study
> <https://www.npca.org/articles/1292-study-reveals-lack-of-awareness-of-waste-challenges-facing-us-national>
> by the National Parks Conservation Association (NPCA), found that more than
> 35 percent of park visitors drink from disposable water bottles. And nearly
> almost 80 percent of visitors would support the removal of single-use water
> bottles in national parks if it would significantly help reduce waste.
>
> rest of the article is available on http://www.truth-out.org/news/
> item/38402-nestle-and-coca-cola-attempt-to-block-
> national-parks-from-banning-bottled-water-sales
>
>
>
>
> IT for Change, Bengaluru
> www.ITforChange.net
>

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