
Your clothes are shedding bits of plastic. Here's what people are doing about it
Plastic is everywhere – and yet some people may be surprised at how much they actually wear.
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A typical wardrobe is loaded with plastic, woven into polyester
activewear , acrylic sweaters, nylon swimsuits and stretchy socks – and it's shedding into the environment nonstop.
When garments are worn, washed and put through the dryer, they shed plastic fibre fragments. A single load of laundry can release millions that are so tiny waste water treatment plants can't capture them all. They wind up in local waterways that
connect to the ocean . Marine animals eat them, and that can pass plastic to larger animals and humans.
Plastic pollution and debris seen floating in the ocean – but it is the tiny microfibres that cannot be seen that are also doing untold environmental damage. Photo: Shutterstock
Even natural fabrics shed fibres and have chemicals that can leach into the environment. But
polyester is the most widely used fibre on Earth, and along with other synthetic fibres accounts for about two-thirds of production worldwide.
April 22 marked Earth Day, when people worldwide contemplate ways to reduce their
impact on the planet
'Everyone who wears and launders clothing is part of this problem but everyone who wears and launders clothing can be part of the solutions,' said Rachael Z. Miller, founder of Vermont-based Rozalia Project for a Clean Ocean in the US.
Rachael Z. Miller says everyone can be part of the solution to the problem of microfibre plastics escaping into the environment. Photo: AP
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