Take the increasing trend of recycling plastic bottles, for example. As information blasting out from all directions tells us, these can be used to grow plants in, for building greenhouses, for constructing car parks, for making rafts and boats, for being used as traditional jharoos and a whole host of other items, and gullible, self-professed environmentalists set to work with vigour, strong in the belief that they are achieving something ‘environmentally friendly’ via the recycling of this toxic, oil-based material, which would, if they had any sense at all, not have been on their shopping list in the first place and whose chemical-based contents generally do their insides, along with the environment they profess to care for, far more harm than good.
The highly profitable organic food market, which is increasingly popular all over the world and very much so with the small section of the population who can afford to purchase ‘pure food’ here in Pakistan, is yet another victim, too. First and foremost and unlike in countries where organic rules and regulations are strictly applied, produce sold here as organic is, on the whole, nothing of the sort — acquiring and then maintaining organic certification takes at least five very long years, in which qualified, suitably registered ‘experts’ maintain strict observation and carry out random testing of the soil in which ‘organic’ crops are being cultivated, plus, they analyse the crops being marketed as organic because when the sun goes down and the bugs come up, who knows which grower sprays what!
Consumers, be these of the ‘environmentally-friendly’ type or not, like their ‘organic’ produce to look like it has just been picked and, quite ridiculously, given the circumstances, are prepared to pay through the nose for the fruits, vegetables and herbs, so tantalisingly displayed in poisonous polystyrene trays sealed inside toxic plastic bags which, let’s face it, makes absolutely no sense at all, even if the artfully arranged contents are organic at all.
Sure, the polystyrene trays, so avid recyclers spout, can be re-employed as seed trays and the plastic bags sent in for recycling to other environmentally and atmospherically destructive ‘things’; it goes without saying that someone, somewhere, is making some kind of profit all down the line.
Even the majority of those opting to grow their own organic produce at home where they can maintain a watchful eye on it, are, thanks to plastics profiteers, increasingly polluting the earth they good-naturedly try to save: plastic wheelbarrows, plastic watering cans, plastic tunnels, plastic plant labels, plastic this, plastic that and plastic plant pots to replace the environmentally-friendly clay ones, which are so climatically suitable, and the making of which gives year-round employment to countless traditional potters with no other viable source of income.
Plastic may be fashionable but it is not, by any measure of the imagination, an environmentally friendly tool.
Published in The Express Tribune, January 9th, 2013.
COMMENTS (5)
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@Mirza: You have elaborated it very well: Regards
@sabi: I agree with you very much. If we use paper, glass or metal containers their cost would be high and shipping would be difficult. The West uses plastic containers from milk to water and all drinks. If these containers are made according to the specs then there is no problem and harm to health. The food is becoming scarce and expensive what would happen if we do not use plastic? Using paper, wood cartons, or metals is more harmful to not just pocket book but the environment. As far as organic food in Pakistan is concerned it is an invitation to infections from "organic farming". A simple use of plastic that can dramatically reduce the water use and labor by the farmer. Black plastic is spread on the soil and transplants are put in small holes. The plastic retains the moisture and stops weeds from taking over. A small trickle of water in the holes where plants are is all that is required. People who are shivering in winter and complaint about the gas can put clear plastic around the windows by tape and seal their windows to stop wind drafts. Regards, M
A man with highly educated family back ground, complained to his friend about his third and youngest son, who unlike other two sons being doctor and engineer, has adopted barber as profession.'Kick him out',replied the friend angerly.Yes; I should have done so but, what to do,he is the only one runing whole family. Is there better option available than plastic?
We are all doomed to die a terrible slow death of our own making. Enjoy the planet, while it lasts. Wish you a good round of golf at the Bhurban Golf Club--the second hole is quite tricky ;)
There is no such thing as organic produce; there is only chemical pesticide and herbicide free produce but the term organic produce is here to stay as a brand name, however.
Plastics of varying kind are here to stay whether we like it or not. It is not true that food grade plastics enter food cycle, and for that matter any plastic components of molded plastics, unless they are plasma vaporized, which is not the case in every day plastic life cycle.
More than 80% of automobile interior is derived from plastics, just look around. A single automobile has more plastics than 100 household use materials combined. All these need to recycled as automotive use increases.
As long as plastic derived material is in use, there is no environmental degradation any further because every plastic item used means one less of it being made. The problem comes when we discard them from usage and that is where the focus should be.
The solution is how to manage the waste. If not plastic, then it will be card boards and resulting massive use of wood pulp.
Had it not been for the plastics, it will be the metals and ceramics and pottery in every day use ( let us remember , human civilizations have evolved from this usage) which require plundering of the earth for raw materials and increased amount of energy needed to make them and transport.
In many respects, the invention of plastics reduced the plundering of the earth for plastic substitutes. We should always ask the question what would have replaced the plastics had it not been invented because the answer will lead to finding a substitute , if it is needed.
Petroleum derived plastic raw materials of today will be replaced by biotech derived plastic raw materials and is already happening in the industry. Technology exists today to recycle the plastics to its various forms of raw materials- Including liquid and gas fuel derivatives.
Contrary to the popular belief, paper and cotton clothes in deep garbage pit do not decompose even after 180 years and older papers of 300 CE era have been dung out in mounds of Arabian desert dunes with writings intact,( and interestingly they were of pornographic content).
Let us start writing in clay tablets and wear leaf- clothes ?