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Earth Government Politics

California Votes To Ban Microbeads 247

New submitter Kristine Lofgren writes: The California Assembly just passed a vote to ban toxic microbeads, the tiny flecks found in toothpastes and exfoliants. Microbeads cause a range of problems, from clogging waterways to getting stuck in gums. The ban would be the strictest of its kind in the nation. As the article notes, the California Senate would need to pass a bill as well, for this ban to take effect, and if that happens, the resulting prohibition will come into place in 2020. From the article: Last year, Illinois became the first state in the U.S. to pass a ban on the usage of microbeads in cosmetics, approving a law that will go into effect in 2018, and earlier this year two congressmen introduced a bipartisan bill to outlaw the use of microbeads nationwide. And for exceptionally good reason; the beads, which serve as exfoliants and colorants are a massive source of water pollution, with scientists estimating that 471 million plastic microbeads are released into San Francisco Bay alone every single day.
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California Votes To Ban Microbeads

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  • by queazocotal ( 915608 ) on Friday May 22, 2015 @08:06PM (#49755591)

    471 million potatos is a lot of potatos.
    471 million .2mm bits of plastic is enough to cover in plastic all of the living rooms in California.
    Wait - no - one living room. Or about a dinner-plates worth a day.

    • by jaa101 ( 627731 )

      471 million potatos is a lot of potatos.
      471 million .2mm bits of plastic is enough to cover in plastic all of the living rooms in California.
      Wait - no - one living room. Or about a dinner-plates worth a day.

      If the beads are 0.2mm in diameter then, by my maths, that comes to about 1 (one) (US) gallon of them. Did someone leave off some zeros?

    • by metlin ( 258108 )

      471 million potatos is a lot of potatos.
      471 million .2mm bits of plastic is enough to cover in plastic all of the living rooms in California.
      Wait - no - one living room. Or about a dinner-plates worth a day.

      Every day. That's the difference.

      Even assuming that it's a dinner plate sized amount of pollution, over two decades, you are looking at 7300 dinner plates. Only, broken into little chunks, easily consumed by aquatic life and smothering plants, clogging pipes etc.

  • Are the fish capable of digesting plastic? One would think that it would just pass through. It's hard to know whether or not to take the matter seriously, as (sadly) the average environmentalist has no idea what the definition of toxic is. One would think that if there were some interesting data the article would at least link it.

    • Re:Poisoning fish? (Score:5, Informative)

      by queazocotal ( 915608 ) on Friday May 22, 2015 @08:13PM (#49755623)

      It gets stuck in some species guts, and some smaller invertebrates guts dramatically reducing their ability to feed.
      It is an actual problem.
      Another major issue is the beads attract pollutants onto their surfaces. These are then efficiently transferred into whatever ingests them.

      There is very little reason to be using plastic microbeads, rather than - for example - wood.

      • Your second point seems a tad weak as before being stuck on the bead, said pollutants are floating freely in the water the organisms large and small breath.

        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          by FranTaylor ( 164577 )

          Your second point seems a tad weak as before being stuck on the bead, said pollutants are floating freely in the water the organisms large and small breath.

          Who says they are "floating freely in the water"? These beads will soak up oils that normally float on top of the water, and carry it down into the water to life that otherwise does not come in contact with those oils.

      • Then we'll all get splinters stuck in our guts!
    • Since they just list the 'bad things' that these mbeads can do, but don't list the extent to which they are actually impacting things, we don't know how bad the problem is. If just .001% of a species of fish is having indigestion, then it might not be worth getting alarmed over. If is it a lot more species and much higher percentages of them caught in the wild show significant ill effects, then its a problem that needs to be dealt with.

      From my experience, when those details are left out its often due to
      • Yeah, I can go googling around and try to find out....but maybe I got other things to google tonight.)

        while you are busy "googling" you might try reading the ingredients list on your hand lotion

      • (smarts ass reply pre-emption: Yeah, I can go googling around and try to find out....but maybe I got other things to google tonight.)
        Do you mean that you don't have a sufficiently vested interest to do the research that the articles author should have fucking done in the first place?
    • by dywolf ( 2673597 )

      one way is it suffocates them by sticking in the gills

  • The article doesn't support the statement that the microbeads are toxic.

    Is there any information that the microbeads are actually toxic?

    • To a chemist, everything is toxic to some extent, even water.
    • The article doesn't support the statement that the microbeads are toxic.

      Is there any information that the microbeads are actually toxic?

      True story. Had a friend in college who would tell you any chance he got to stay away from microbeads, they were the worst thing ever invented, Satan's gift to mankind, etc.

      Seems he'd gotten a handjob from a girl who used microbead-laced lotion and it burned the hell out of his junk.

    • It turns out that when you take materials that are usually not a problem, and change their surface chemistry, they can become problems. Take carbon, for example. Pencil "lead" is graphite. Not a problem. OTOH, take a look at a bottle of graphite lock lube. It's the same element, in a fine powder form. There are all kinds of warnings on it because it can get into your lungs.

      IANAChemist but I think a real chemist would agree that surface chemistry is an exciting new field, and we don't know enough about

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