Tag: toxic plastic

Inspiring quotes on plastic for motivation

Inspiring quotes on plastic for motivation

As the last post on Plastic-Free July, we will leave you with various quotes on plastic. Learn and make a change!

Plastic Free Beach Toronto thanks to Dora Attard

Plastic Free Beach Toronto thanks to Dora Attard

Be open and let the world inspire you. Dora Attard inspired us when we met her at Woodbine Beach. Please find out more about her work below.

Making peace with plastic. Is it possible?

Making peace with plastic. Is it possible?

We have been consciously plastic-free for 3 years. But we still hate it, so we are curious if there is a way to make peace with plastic.

When we first started with avoiding spending money on plastic, we had really no idea that it could really stick on us. But luckily it did. I can still clearly remember the first months of being plastic-free. How I was in a panic looking for items in tin cans, glass or cardboard. It almost seemed like a fun, but still difficult game. I didn’t want plastic, and I had very negative feelings toward plastic. The same applies today, but I started thinking maybe this hatred towards the god of the materials is unnecessary. Below is what helped me to decide.

Cry in the desert?

Being plastic-free only brings peace of mind to the one who practises it. Their contribution to avoiding it doesn’t really bring much change. It does if it is possible to cut down the fee of the container waste removal. But most of the time even that is not possible. Perhaps it makes a friend or two think about plastic and its nasty ways as well. But besides all that this is, is a cry in the desert.

Perhaps that cry in the desert is what one needs. Knowing that no money has been exchanged for the very expensive packaging, gives peace of mind. The material is actually cheap while offering a temporary home for the food items we are paying money for to bring home. What makes plastic expensive is its environmental impact. Another thing is plastic is not healthy. So yes, keep using your reusable drinking or coffee cup, ditch the plastic straws, and buy into your own container if possible. If making you feel better is the only thing, then sure continue with it.

This great little table at Chariot Energy’s website is sharing the estimated decomposition of various plastic items:

MaterialEstimated Decomposition
Cigarette butts5 years
Plastic bags20 years
Plastic-lined coffee cups30 years
Plastic straws200 years
Soda can rings400 years
Plastic bottles450 years
Toothbrushes500 years
Disposable diapers500 years
Styrofoam500 years
Fishing line600 years
GlassUnknown

Crazy stuff, eh? No wonder it makes one feel good not to participate in that. Even though while we are voting during buying, we do not stand an option of closing down any hundreds of plastic factories in the world. What would help us making peace with plastic is hope for a novel, environmental-friendly materials. Also, more bans at the country-level definitely would help to shake the situation.

What is really happening with the plastic?

According to packaging giant Tetra Pak, here are some really frightening facts about plastic. We may think that if we sort the garbage, put recyclable items in the box, then we are good to go. As all plastic gets recycled and we have done our good deed.

  • Fossil-based plastic production is growing – and only 9% of total plastic is recycled
  • 32% of all plastic packaging is not collected and plastic can take hundreds of years to degrade
  • Plastic production, fueled by fossil fuels, reached 359 million metric tonnes in 2018
  • Packaging made from aluminum is energy intensive to produce
  • Paper-based packaging is catching high industry interest
  • Plant-based materials are renewable and better for the environment

Imagine that only 9% of total plastic is recycled! This completely blew my mind! If current trends continue, roughly 12 billion metric tons of plastic waste will be in landfills or the natural environment by 2050. Twelve billion metric tons is about 35,000 times as heavy as the Empire State Building. Imagine the pollution of the plastic to the groundwater, flora, and fauna, not to mention our oceans. Actually, it poses the biggest threat to the oceans.

A disposable, single-use plastic bag saying thank you on its surface
The photo was taken by Christopher Vega, who can be found on Instagram

What the world is doing to ditch plastic?

Actually, a lot is happening, though we are drowning in plastic, the world is making some direct changes towards using plastic. Governments in at least 32 countries have banned plastic bags altogether and at least 127 countries have implemented policies regulating plastic bags according to the United Nations. Many countries around the globe are implementing plastic bans and encouraging consumers to replace plastic with alternative materials including biodegradable single-use items and eco-friendly reusable products.

Forbes.com shares lots of information on the company’s promise to cut down on plastic waste. Seems like big-name brands such as Nestle, Coca-Cola, Henkel, Kimberly-Clark, Tetra Pak, and so on, are actually working hard on ditching the poisonous and annoying plastic. Why there is so much talk about packaging this year? Due to Covid-19 people got into ordering in and buying online, which probably made the plastic consumption 100 x higher than it has ever been. Results of such destroying behaviour don’t go unnoticed, hence many businesses have sustainable packaging on their agendas. 2021 is shaping up to be the year that packaging transforms from wrecking our environment with excess waste to making the planet environmentally wonderful.

One of our favourite Instagram accounts Live Kindly has put together a nice article on what the world has been doing to ban plastic. Reading this article gives hope, as more countries are banning single-use items, such as plastic bags, straws, plates, cups, etc. This gives us hope and makes us think of perhaps one day there is a way of making peace with plastic.

Conclusion

It has been relatively easy for us to ditch plastic. Being vegan, we do not buy food items, which are coming in plastic packaging. If we crave something such as cream cheese, for example, we make our own using cashews. You can get these in bulk or in no plastic container. Even though we are not giving our money for plastic, it still finds its way to our home. We are blessed to receive food donations for our volunteering gigs from many kind people. And have a good friend who is always sharing her surplus with us. So she kind of keeps our recycling box filled. While we take it out, we from now on think that only 9% of plastic gets recycled. And we get mad again. There is no making peace with plastic. Not at least in 2021!

The header photo is taken by Volodymyr Hryshchenko. We are very thankful for him sharing his creations for free with the world.

Sources:

Forbes

Science Daily

Live Kindly

Plastic detox: deplastify your life

Plastic detox: deplastify your life

We came up with a quick and short way of getting our messages out there. Let this plastic detox post be the first of its kind!

Plastic-Free July is here to make the (useless?) plastic go away!

Plastic-Free July is here to make the (useless?) plastic go away!

Most likely not, but July allows us to bring more attention to a material, which is polluting our world in every field of the world.

Have you seen the ad of Tru Earth Laundry Eco-Strips?

Have you seen the ad of Tru Earth Laundry Eco-Strips?

After watching this video – you will know more than enough about Tru Earth laundry eco-strips and you will be sold. We definitely are!

Doing laundry is almost as essential, as using a comb, toothpaste, toothbrush, and toilet paper. I mean in some way or other, we all wash our clothing. But what is at the moment perhaps more essential than the laundry detergent, is the advertisement they are using to advertise their eco-strips!

When we lived in Germany we started exploring and experimenting more with natural household cleaners. Most exciting was when I realized that the horse chestnuts can be used for laundry! Lucky us they were in abundance in the area, where we lived.

I feel like I am falling off the subject here.

What I was going to say…

is that Tru Earth laundry eco-strips are revolutionary!

Though we are into zero waste, using less, buying less, and having fewer things, we haven’t yet tried the strips ourselves. Because when we moved to Toronto, we have received many laundry detergents for free. But this all happened after we purchased a locally-made natural laundry powder. So we have a lot to go through yet, as we do not do laundry so often anyway. 

The good things about Tru Earth Laundry Eco-Strips:

  • New zero-waste compostable packaging
  • No measuring & no mess
  • Dissolves completely in hot or cold water.
  • Works in all washing machines, including HE. Front loads or top loads.
  • Helps keep 700,000,000 plastic jugs out of landfills per year

Washing with Tru Earth laundry eco-strips is easy as 1, 2, 3!

But I do not have to like Tru Earth laundry eco-strips to know that they are doing so much good. If you see their video, then you know what I am talking about. It is so smart, so fresh, so funny, a bit sexist, but again you could overlook that because what matters the most is the message. And the message is strong. Strong and bold. The video has nearly a million views in a month. A laundry detergent! Wow!

We haven’t received such attention to plastic waste, recycling myths, and plastics longevity ever before in any advertisement. This is an eye-opener hopefully to many people. It is a good advertising trick as well, as people like me become easily their fans, without even trying their product.

Message of Tru Earth laundry eco-strips

The short video portrays a very manly man who starts doing laundry. He doesn’t like it, but soon starts to love it because of Tru Earth laundry eco-strips! He calls out men to be more manly, explains that these eco-strips replace garbage, are eco-friendly, good to your skin, etc:

These funny looking strips I just use instead of my old laundry detergent. Why? Because this replaces this garbage. And who has time to wait 450 years for this junk to decompose? No, I’d rather be doing something manly, like pre-sorting the whites, darks, and oh, so delicates.

Maybe you’re saying, “Oh no, no, no. I put all my recyclables in the recycling bin.” I hate to ruin the mood, but 75% of the content in your recycling bin is rejected at the recycling plant, which heads straight to the landfill.

There’s just not enough need for all the junk we throw away. No! And real men say, “No,” to heavy, wasteful bottles, burning fossil fuel as they ship them all over the country. I pity the fossil fool. That’s why real men use, Tru Earth Eco-Strips. No wasteful packaging, no harmful chemicals. As sensitive to your skin as it is to our planet.

Tru Earth Eco-Strips are designed to be tough on dirt, tough on sweat, and even tougher on the hardest of stains. Simply tear off a pre-measured strip, throw it into your washing machine, and watch that little beauty dissolve completely into that, oh, so fresh smelling goodness. Now that’s hot.

Drumroll, please! Watch the TruEarth laundry eco-strips advertisement here

Video to advertise Tru Earth laundry eco-strips

What are your thoughts? Would love to hear your ideas about it!

If you like to find out more about different zero waste laundry detergents, including the Tru Earth laundry eco-strips,  then please tune in here:

Conclusion

Some day we will try out Tru Earth ourselves and see if we are fully sold, or we will be just huge fans of creative and environmentally friendly advertising. Whatever it is, it was a nice experience to consume an ad, which initiates men to do more at home, inspire people to think about plastic and the future of wildlife. On a day like today, we need more attention on heating subjects which appreciate nature and animals.

P.s. Though the strips are a bit pricey buying them would be the most reasonable for Canadians as it is made here, to keep down the emissions.

Don’t Buy Peanut Butter In A Plastic Container. Ever.

Don’t Buy Peanut Butter In A Plastic Container. Ever.

We do not buy much plastic, as we know about its health hazards. But this new discovery about peanut butter in plastic containers blew our minds!