This Is NOT A Recycling Symbol

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 21 ธ.ค. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 3.4K

  • @joescott
    @joescott  9 หลายเดือนก่อน +478

    I want to point you guys to ColdFusion's video on Microplastics because I kinda hint at that problem and he goes deep into it. It kinda points to the reason why all this plastic build-up is really a problem. And it's a good video. :)
    th-cam.com/video/4XDLSqn0dCk/w-d-xo.htmlsi=wUTgo6DkUTV_3FjA

    • @lolmao500
      @lolmao500 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

      Hi man, if you know about Project 2025, and what it means for the US and the world if trump is re-elected... seems it would be a good video to make on what it would mean... because it seems a lot of people dont know about it and its basically cataclysmic for the US if it happens. With your channels reach and views, it would be amazing...

    • @judithgockel1001
      @judithgockel1001 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      My friend, if you had an individual around all the time who made jokes that lame, you might not recycle him, but similar thoughts might cross your mind.😂

    • @Davethreshold
      @Davethreshold 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      Yes, Dagogo is hard to beat! You and him are two of my fave YT people. Going to watch this one right now. Got as far as, "Will you recycle my Husband?" LOL!🤡

    • @henrythegreatamerican8136
      @henrythegreatamerican8136 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Fix your fence. Makes your backyard look like a junk yard. Maybe you can recycle some of that metal from the fence.

    • @ThisOldSkater
      @ThisOldSkater 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      As a species, we just have to come to grips with the fact that the post WW2 life style is just not sustainable. GG humanity.

  • @spidalack
    @spidalack 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +687

    The comment about plastic packaging is so spot on. We wrap things in plastic that have no reason to be wrapped in plastic.

    • @MrGoesBoom
      @MrGoesBoom 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      it's like putting anti-biotics in soap...like why? just why? not needed

    • @HandleHandled
      @HandleHandled 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      … as far as you know.

    • @atypical1000
      @atypical1000 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +74

      There was a comment on Reddit today, someone decided to buy some bamboo straws to reduce the plastic they use, the package arrived in a load of bubble wrap and then each straw was wrapped in plastic that was bigger than their hand and appeared to be more plastic than is in an actual straw!

    • @grug_son_of_thog
      @grug_son_of_thog 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +29

      I recently bought a new set of flatware to replace the really cheap set I've had for the last ten years because I got sick of fighting the rust and bending.
      This is how the 45-piece set was packaged:
      Outer box
      Inner box
      Brand vanity insert
      Two identical care and warranty cards
      Bubble-wrapped bundles of every category of utensil (forks, spoons, knives+misc.)
      INDIVIDUAL PLASTIC SLEEVES FOR EVERY SINGLE UTENSIL.
      I get that they don't want the stuff arriving scratched but come the hell on. 45 plastic sleeves, 3 sheets of bubble wrap, and about a dozen rubber bands is absurd.

    • @lijohnyoutube101
      @lijohnyoutube101 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      @@grug_son_of_thogyep we recently bought 3 metal shelf stands and each shelf had multiple plastic protectors on tops/bottoms and each wire etc.
      We bought metal shelves instead of plastic for a reason.
      We had two FULL size huge trash bags of the plastic coverings! I was like COME on!

  • @mrtheitalian2538
    @mrtheitalian2538 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +998

    I work as a receiving clerk. I open 50-80 boxes a day. it’s insane how much plastic is used when it comes to packaging materials. However, a lot of companies have started using crunched up paper as packaging material, as well as paper tape to seal the boxes. It’s nice seeing companies using paper as a packaging material

    • @joemama069
      @joemama069 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +116

      My cynical side tells me they do it because of societal pressure or to greenwash themselves, not because they actually want to be eco-friendly, but hey, if it helps it helps.

    • @adambastien3635
      @adambastien3635 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +41

      Landfill or deforestation

    • @runningsandwich
      @runningsandwich 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +33

      ​@adambastien3635 the US farms trees for paper

    • @mrtheitalian2538
      @mrtheitalian2538 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

      @@runningsandwich better than plastic

    • @joemama069
      @joemama069 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

      @@mrtheitalian2538 Not really unfortunately, the underlying problem is overpopulation and resource the intensive-lifestyles of basically everyone in first-world-countries.

  • @r.1599
    @r.1599 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +443

    I miss the days when pop/soda/soft drink and milk came in glass bottles, you would go to the butcher to get meat and they'd wrap it in waxed paper. Appliances were made from metal and made to last. Clothes and shoes were made to last for years, not months. Things like pencil cases were made from wood or cotton fabric, and the zippers were metal. Hardly anything was plastic. Sure, things were slower but there was a sense of excitement when the Pepsi guy would come into town with his truck of soft drinks. My brother had a job on the milk run where he'd count the metal tokens, pick up people's empties, and replace them with full bottles of milk. Empty milk and soft drink bottles were returned to be washed and sterilised, and filled again. Milk and soft drink caps were recyclable steel or aluminum. It worked when there were fewer people and less expectation for speed.

    • @dfuss2756
      @dfuss2756 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +33

      You must be as old as I am. Those are some of my fond memories.

    • @grantperkins368
      @grantperkins368 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      And you must be as old as me😮 my favourite toys - a wooden block construction set, a wooden bow and arrows, and a rubber-band powered balsa wood plane ... Shopping bags were paper, bottled milk had a bit of cream on top of the milk, we'd buy lollies in paper bags, and most houses had a wall of empty beer bottles in the backyard! 😂

    • @oliviatorres251
      @oliviatorres251 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

      I am not sure why, but I know that some Mexican Sodas like jarritos and the coke sold there are still sold in glass bottles

    • @CatwomanMeowz
      @CatwomanMeowz 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Ok boomer

    • @r.1599
      @r.1599 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      @@CatwomanMeowz
      😆
      X-er.

  • @EricAlanMedia
    @EricAlanMedia 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +180

    My county banned "single use" plastic bags. So what did Walmart many others in the area do? They started using much thicker plastic bags instead, and called them "reusable". Problem is nobody re-uses them. Now we have the same problem as before, only it's worse as each bag that's thrown out has five times the plastic in it as before.

    • @FronteirWolf
      @FronteirWolf 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      I use my backpack when shopping.

    • @la.zanmal.
      @la.zanmal. 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      How did it happen that the plastics industry had to market and campaign for people to *stop* trying to reuse plastic bags, but now they won't reuse them even when they're specifically marketed and designed for the purpose???

    • @user-lt6oh2bu7c
      @user-lt6oh2bu7c 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      @@FronteirWolfReusable bags need thorough cleaning to help prevent transfer of mold, toxins etcetera to your food surfaces as well.

    • @johng4093
      @johng4093 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I bring my own throwaway single use plastic bags that I buy in bulk on Amazon, much cheaper than in-store bought. 😊

    • @ktrimbach5771
      @ktrimbach5771 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Groceries went to disposable paper bags to remove the problem of contamination from reusable bags. Then fOr SoMe ReAsOn they switched to disposable plastic bags. Now they encourage people to use their own bags again. 🥴

  • @zch7491
    @zch7491 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +714

    I swear, growing up is all about finding out all the ways you were lied to

    • @gaywizard2000
      @gaywizard2000 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

      I was 50 before I realized my mom was 5 months pregnant with my sister when she married my dad! Also there is no permanent record! The more you know 🌈

    • @bradley-eblesisor
      @bradley-eblesisor 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      People who love me tell me that I have become increasingly negative in my outlook. I have. I hate it. I hate being lied to constantly. Kinda like the mushroom analogy about being kept in the dark and being fed a diet of feces. But my anger hurts only those around me, not the sources.

    • @christophermullins7163
      @christophermullins7163 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      If you appreciate knowing the painful truth then check out Billy Carson. The man is such a beacon of light on my daily life. He is a superhero 😎😊

    • @alex.g7317
      @alex.g7317 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@gaywizard2000why didn’t she tell you… and how old is your mom if you were 50?

    • @nephicus339
      @nephicus339 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      were? As adults, we are still constantly being lied to. :P

  • @AngryAnt0
    @AngryAnt0 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +53

    As a Brit I know the companies (and more including the public) aren't doing anywhere near their part to actually help in this problem, but what has really shocked me was my visit to the US recently.
    In one single night stay in a hotel, I used more plastic than I'd used back in the UK in a year, the US really has a problem (from straws to plastic cutlery both wrapped in plastic etc oh and also a trip to walmart where I walked out with about 15 bags for 20 or so items). It honestly blew my mind how much of a sticking fingers in the ears and screaming it appeared to be compared to the rest of the world.

    • @jamescarter3196
      @jamescarter3196 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      It's really weird here, and the regions have major differences about it. I live in Oregon, and we've had a beverage-container recycling system for a very long time which is a model for the nation, but the nation hasn't adopted it, and likewise we actually have real recycling centers where they recycle glass, metals, paper, and some kinds of plastics. I've seen our local facility so I know it exists, so it's appalling to find out how much of the country doesn't have the real thing, and they just use the 'recycling bin' as a secondary trash can. Even where I live, there's a lot of lazy recycling efforts by individuals which cause their stuff to just be dumped in the landfill rather than clean it up for them-- they do SOME cleaning at the recycling facility but you can't give them a bunch of plastic covered in dried ketchup and oily pizza boxes and expect they'll take care of it, so the consumers here deserve a fair share of blame for being lazy like that)

    • @kitefan1
      @kitefan1 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      The plastic food service got even worse after Covid. IMO. The ramp up to plastic started earlier. When I used to stay in motels the water glasses were glass. But you never knew if they had been washed and sanitized and the plastic ones are cheaper.

    • @prich0382
      @prich0382 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Funny thing about Plastic vs Paper Straws. Plastic Starws are recyclable while paper Straws with all the glue and stuff in it measn it isn't recyclable, yet Paper Straw packagine says it is which is flat out wrong.

    • @SnoFitzroy
      @SnoFitzroy 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      "more than I'd use in a year" I literally do not believe you. I need proof, studies, articles, etc. I want stats if I'm gonna take a fucking brit at their word (I'm not American, I just live here)

    • @Calvin_Coolage
      @Calvin_Coolage 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      ​@@prich0382So you're telling me my hatred of paper straws is objectively correct?

  • @eldrago19
    @eldrago19 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +193

    I was an IT apprentice during a gap year. One of my jobs was to receive deliveries. I recall one product that was in a plastic bag, in a carboard display case, in a carboard box, surrounded by bubble wrap, in a carboard box, done up with zip ties.
    The product: 'rugged' phone cases!

    • @davidanderson_surrey_bc
      @davidanderson_surrey_bc 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

      What kind of rug did they have? Shag? Weave?

    • @keithhowell4138
      @keithhowell4138 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@davidanderson_surrey_bcI see you haven’t outgrown adolescent humour.

    • @robhogg68
      @robhogg68 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Not quite so heinous, but I remember taking delivery of a pallet of floppy drives for installation in a new batch of PCs (in the transitional time when they were no longer coming as standard, but while the disks were still widely.
      On the pallet, in their boxes and polystyrene, they took up a five or six foot cube. I unpacked them on the loading bay, and by the time I finished I had a small plastic crate of floppy drives which I could easily carry upstairs. I do realise they needed some packaging to protect them during delivery, but pretty sure much less would have sufficed.

    • @lachlanlau
      @lachlanlau หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@robhogg68 maybe packaging technology has improved by now? I'd imagine FDD's of that era would still be quite delicate and heavy.

  • @RodeoDogLover
    @RodeoDogLover 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +275

    I tried for many stressful years to BE THE CHANGE and now feel an uncomfortable amount of despair every time I hold an empty plastic container in my hand and wonder if I should just chuck it isn’t the regular bin because the system isn’t working and I’m tired of the ever-moving targeted “best” option in our sea-of-micro-trash solutions. But I am truly grateful that you’ve laid it all out so plainly. You are appreciated.

    • @eugenetswong
      @eugenetswong 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      Me, too. I might have been 1 of the first million people to start recycling in my country. It's hard to throw it in the trash. I still recycle. 😞

    • @SurfingFLA
      @SurfingFLA 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      Recycling was sold to us in Florida about saving landfill space. I have heard the complaints how recycling doesn't work, and a lot of valid arguments. My presumption is one by one somebody would find a use for recycled items. So, Joe's presentation is a real kick in the nards. Quite frankly, it sounds like the best idea is to boycott plastic containers by favoring glass. I am doing this anyway to mitigate ingesting micro plastics. In fact, I have discovered food products in glass containers generally have healthier ingredients. So, that's my current solution-go back to glass. I quit using a Keurig and now make coffee by just throwing the grounds in a pot of boiling water-just like John Wayne on a cattle drive. As far as the energy to recreate plastics, theoretically that should become viable as solar generated electric becomes more practical. As technologies increasingly eliminate livelihoods, the recycling industry can help offset that, especially for those of us that are not likely to become software engineers and such.

    • @grantperkins368
      @grantperkins368 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Ok, personal opinion, I reckon it's gotta be a lie that plastic can't be melted down and recycled , it's probably just cheaper to make new stuff

    • @thisnameisavailable
      @thisnameisavailable 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Most things that can be recycled but isn’t is entirely a business decision. When recycling is more expensive than just making more of the material and companies aren’t forced to recycle they just don’t.

    • @mihailbormin
      @mihailbormin 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      I'm trying to be calm about it. I do what I can without ruining my life. I reuse plastic bags, I always have few of them in my backpack (which is again a convenient and a good way of using plastics). If I forgot it home, well, it's okay to use a new plastic bag. Just have to not forget to take used ones next time. Just don't be an absolutist, do what you can without disrupting your life.

  • @emily.toombs
    @emily.toombs 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

    When ever I come across someone talking about the recycling scam I think of the little only ladies of Kamikatsu Japan lovingly sorting their trash at their town’s 45 bin recycling center every week. It claims to be a “zero waste town.” It’s a town of about 2000 people with one collection center and each household gets a big booklet explaining the recycling process and what the collection center sorting system is. They center also has a “zero waste academy” a non profit set up to teach you. Their paper category has 9 subsections, for instance. I’m unclear where their recycling goes now but I recall they used to incinerate their trash before this center.

  • @scoopsmcgoops
    @scoopsmcgoops 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1081

    “Humans ingest the equivalent of one credit card’s worth of plastic per week”
    *puts down the credit card I was munching on in disgust*

    • @shaelinnaidoo131
      @shaelinnaidoo131 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Guys we found him. Credit Cards Georg

    • @harpodjangorose9696
      @harpodjangorose9696 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +78

      *swallows third credit card since breakfast*
      Hmmm… maybe I should cut back too.

    • @RoyIMVU
      @RoyIMVU 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +38

      Isn't that how you are supposed to dispose expired ccs?

    • @CMDRSweeper
      @CMDRSweeper 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

      It is what the modern body needs, can't only have iron in your diet.
      We have to stay modern, so we need to chew on plastics, aluminum rods and stainless steel rods to keep a modern body up to the new code :D

    • @maxthrust976
      @maxthrust976 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      I don't know how I can be expected to make one of these last a whole week.

  • @agoule01
    @agoule01 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +149

    When I worked at Starbucks we had a trash bin and a "recycling" bin in the lobby for customers to use. Except, we didn't have a recycling service, so the stuff in the the "recycle" bin just went in the same dumpster as everything else. That was every Starbucks I've ever worked at, in multiple states. Some of them had a special cardboard box dumpster that was recycled, I'll give them that, but that was essentially dependent on the town itself

    • @skierpage
      @skierpage 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      People should bring their own to-go cup to Starbucks. Starbucks should build an automated robot to rinse and clean the cups.

    • @Hailey-bz2ym
      @Hailey-bz2ym 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      Yeah there’s a subway by my work that has recycling and trash holes in the garbage bin and both holes lead to the same bin.. dumbfounded me when I saw it

    • @ronblack7870
      @ronblack7870 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@skierpagewhat ???? starbucks should clean YOUR cups? the laziest generation wants someone else to clean their cups??? how about you make your own coffee for 30 cents and don't go to starbucks?

    • @drawingmomentum
      @drawingmomentum 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I think this happens at schools too.

    • @daviddroescher
      @daviddroescher 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Waste Management is famous for this practice. Some districts use separate trucks to empty recycling and trash bins, both are empty into the same hole at the dump. Other districts use the same truck on a separate trip still taken to the same dump hole.

  • @sevenstars004
    @sevenstars004 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    I'm 52, when I was little, in the 1970s, I remember on the side of any highway/freeway/interstate/major road was so much sh*t it was insane. People just threw everything out of their car windows. Done with the fast food? Chuck the containers out the window, I don't want it in my car. Done with that beer? Toss the bottle out the window, I don't want empties in here, it'll stink (a lot of stuff happened back then that wasn't even frowned on much that would get you, rightfully so, in a lot of trouble today. Ask anyone my age or older lol. That was your last cigarette? Chuck the empty pack out the window, dumbass, what am I going to do with it? (back then, vehicles didn't have power points, they had cigarette lighters. In the ashtray. That the vast majority of people used. With the babies and kids in the car. No one thought twice. In fact, up to the late 1980s a lot of high schools in the US had smoking areas between classes. For the students. Told ya it was different, didn't I? Don't let middle age and older people tell you stupid shit like it was some wholesome, wonderful golden age. It wasn't. It was just what we had and a lot of people only remember the happy memories and not all of the dumb stuff that happened on a pretty much constant basis.) I do remember, when I was really little, the "Crying Indian Commercial" and a lot of other anti-litter campaigns (thank God. It was nasty af. Seriously UGH). Over probably a decade, litter became less and less on the sides of the roads and signs appeared stating how much of a fine you'd get if you were caught littering. Today, you don't see much on the road sides (yes, there's always exceptions. That one road that's all f*cked up. That neighborhood that looks like a dump. I know. I mean, overall, the roads today look so, so much better than they did then.
    Also, when I was little, I remembering flying to Los Angeles from Pennsylvania and approaching LA, it looked like a giant dome of dirt because of the air pollution. That doesn't happen anymore either. Thankfully.
    I'm amazed I didn't die of lung cancer at 19.

    • @AschenDog
      @AschenDog 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I was born in '87, there were still smoking sections in restaurants when I was little around here. Our Denny's that recently closed down? The rare chance I ate there, I still sat in the former "non-smoking section" out of habit. Sitting in what used to be the "smoking section" always felt weird.

    • @sevenstars004
      @sevenstars004 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@AschenDog haha that's funny that you mentioned Denny's and smoking/non-smoking. There is a Denny's near me and whenever the subject of restaurants with those sections, the first and only mental image I have is of Denny's 😂. All of the restaurants had them and they were all silly but for some reason, it's the mental picture of Denny's that appears in my mind. Maybe it was there that for th first time it struck me how silly it was, three people smoking cigarettes, two feet from people who didn't smoke. Apparently the people knew who wanted to smoke and who didn't, but no one told the smoke itself because it floated everywhere, filling the restaurant, socializing with everyone indiscriminately, as smoke does.
      Looking back, I wish I had a photograph because it was funny - two signs, clearly stating "Smoking" and "Non-smoking" while smoke just filled the place, oblivious to the imaginary barrier the signs were supposed to create. 🤣

  • @wolfcat1998
    @wolfcat1998 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +174

    I used to work at a plastic recycling plant and probably 95% of the plastic bottles we took in went right into the trash. Worst $8 an hour job I ever had.

    • @lijohnyoutube101
      @lijohnyoutube101 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Why? What disqualified so much of it?

    • @bradley-eblesisor
      @bradley-eblesisor 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      I can only imagine the soul crushing experience that must have been.

    • @wolfcat1998
      @wolfcat1998 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +38

      @lijohnyoutube101 wrong color, wrong number, etc. I think there were only three types of plastic we could actually recycle. That was on top of all the actual garbage people mixed in. All these years later I can still smell that job.

    • @wolfcat1998
      @wolfcat1998 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      @@bradley-eblesisor if I've had worse jobs, I can't think of them at the moment.

    • @Volvith
      @Volvith 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

      @@wolfcat1998 I have done some shitty jobs.
      I've done factory work, i've had to hand clean big boy air filtering systems for entire production lines, did a really short bit in drain flushing... Truly disgusting shit.
      I can tell you first hand i would not even consider working in plastic recycling. I have nothing but the deepest respect for you mate. I question your life choices, but i ain't one to judge. :P
      May your nostrils be ever free of 'i have no idea what can even smell like this' stink.

  • @maddie8415
    @maddie8415 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +124

    When I as in elementary school 30 or so year ago, the motto that was always drilled into our head was always "reduce, reuse, and recycle"...in that order. Recycle was the last option, and it's no surprise that the plastic industry has warped our brains into thinking that it's the first and best one. I also am just blown away by all of the wildly pointless plastic wrapping that is used in packaging new products. Multiple layers. Thanks for speaking up on the issue, it's about time that we all were more aware of the way we've been manipulated into thinking that the plastic situation is somehow "solvable" by recycling alone.

    • @LestatTravesty
      @LestatTravesty 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      thing is. if there wasn't plastic making up so much of our modern day living and all the decades of it doing so. we have two options. not gain any progress, advancing or simply...there would be something else taking its place.
      so just how much can you or i or them scum bags becoming billionaires off of its existence, actually hate the fact that we needed something in insane abundance to advance or species? so i suggest all the ones that think its so horrid that we have polluted our world with it, take the lead, and go without it. if yenz can do it, i will try my best to do so too. other than that, people wanting to bash the modern day westernized worlds for advancing us all, are just some type of hypocrit that are more useless and annoying than anything else, because it is too easy for someone else, to change their life, versus their own.
      what we can do at least, is simply reuse the living shi8 out of our plastic products. and there is the stupidest easiest ways to do so taboot. that all yenz, everyone don't bother doing. like using the plastic grocerie bags as trash bags or all type of other holding sacks. or the rand bowls we use to eat with that get old and stained, scuffed up. a cat or dog don't give a rats as about that, they only care that it gets food put into it. such as we should only care about. not toss them in landfills over shallow reasons. or them 5 gallon paint buckets. i'de love to know why they can't recycle and use them for another 5 gallons of paint? that buildings built and painted with dozens of them buckets....all go to the landfill after that one use?? its the stupidest shi8 in the world and all this stupid stuff that we could do, that we don't do, out of a lack of actual "actual" care. the mass of us don't care. not you. not Joe. and definitely the millions upon millions of people that make money off of its endless use. i actually do care, and i do alot of what i mention up there on the daily bases, every single day. some of that is because its simply the better thing to do with plastics and some of it i do out of simple common sense. like i need a trash bag...there is no reason to not just use one of the 4 i just uses to carry groceries in. and yeah... paint buckets are so dam handy...you'd be a moron to toss them out an dover look all the extra value they have, outside of just being "named" a paint bucket. they are water collecting barrow, a clean up bucket. a fast sturdy step to reach something with. and whatever else you find you can use them for. they not trash to be throw in a landfill after using the paint in them. but thats just how got dam ignorant and privileged we have evolved. oh and lumber...i use and reuse that in many ways, its not trashed out until it starts rotting and too weak for another use.
      thats a book but it does annoy me to hear pointless ignorant bickering about something that has done as all so much insane good for creating it. someone created it and for us to use. we are the ones screwing up by thinking a plastic this or a plastic that, is only valued at the name the item is given. a cereal soup bowl, is now a pets food bowl for a decade. a bucket, is now a stepping stool. a plastic drinking cup...is now a spare change collector. so i praise the people that make our plastic products. not one bit shame them in any form.

    • @robertsandlin366
      @robertsandlin366 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Some might say wraped our brains in plastic...

  • @elizabethpemberton8445
    @elizabethpemberton8445 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    The best part about glass pop bottles was that one night every fall, forgetting it was going to freeze overnight and not bringing the pop in from the garage. Or when Dad put a bottle in the freezer to cool faster and forgot about that. Yay shards of exploded glass! The best thing about the old-style pop tabs on cans (the ones that were designed to come off) was the giant hill of them next to the pop machines on the golf course. And stepping on them, hidden in the grass, in bare feet. Why yes, I am using “best” sarcastically.

  • @robhogg68
    @robhogg68 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +102

    "Imagine what it was like going to the doctor before plastic"...
    I don't have to, I remember it. Well, not BEFORE plastic, but before plastic EVERYTHING.
    I worked in a hospital in the 1980s. It had a sterile supplies department, which had several massive autoclaves. After instruments and instrument trays were used, they'd be taken down there, cleaned, sterilised, and re-packed. Like those drink bottles with a deposit, they were re-usable not disposable.
    It was great

    • @sabrinafelber
      @sabrinafelber หลายเดือนก่อน

      I worked in one in 2000. We had a lot of things made to be sterilized and reused but alot were plastics as well.

  • @katthawthorne1027
    @katthawthorne1027 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +131

    Getting a handle on plastic packaging excesses would be GREAT but one area where plastic use is rampant that I feel goes unnoticed a lot actually pertains to that carrying case for your boom pole--textiles. Polyester is a petroleum derived plastic, and is EXTREMELY common in textiles, for everything from the clothes we wear, to our shoes, to boom pole carrying cases, to carpets, and much, much more. Polyester is ubiquitous. And it sheds. It sheds when it's worked into products, it sheds when it's worn or walked on, it sheds when it's run through a washing machine. I have no idea what to do about that or even if it's as much of a problem as I fear it is, but I felt it was worth mentioning because most people don't know what polyester actually IS. But I can't imagine that the environmental impact of this particular plastic product could possibly be any less than, say, water bottles or drinking straws.

    • @terranhealer
      @terranhealer 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      When I hear people talk about moving away from oil dependency, I think about all the plastics. No oil….no plastic for cell phones, vehicle interiors, clothing, etc…

    • @pazsion
      @pazsion 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      good

    • @E1Luch
      @E1Luch 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      @@terranhealer Plastics or any hydrocarbons can be made from any carbon-containing feedstock. Tech for this have existed for almost a century now but was more expensive than refining fossil fuels.

    • @rossgirven5163
      @rossgirven5163 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@terranhealer there are alternatives.

    • @drawingmomentum
      @drawingmomentum 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I'd add carpeting to the list.

  • @orazha
    @orazha 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +29

    Joe, I don't want to throw cold water on your excellent presentation but... I applaud you for this well needed video and the discussion it helps generate. It was many years ago when I was involved (on the BOD) with a plastics recycling company and I've worked with plastics throughout my career. While I wasn't involved with the chemistry, I was involved with all of the people who believed wholeheartedly in what we were doing. We watched, with wonder, at how the machinery could detect the type of plastic going through a fast conveyor belt, kick out the different plastics into their separate bins, go through shredding, washing, more shredding, more washing, and end up in fully separated bins of different plastics. These plastics would then be mixed together to produce pellets of particular characteristics which would be sold to manufacturers of plastic products to their specifications. The input was from plastic post office bags, laundry detergent bottles (which lent a "pleasant" odor to the factory), and a few other types of product. The plastics were purchased for the typed of plastic we needed so we couldn't take all recycled plastics.
    We believed that we were helping to reduce the overall amount of plastic in our environment. Over time, I've been an avid recycler, separating out all the numbered items, putting them into plastic containers or plastic bags... and imagining that they were ultimately going to the same kind of facility that we had in the '90s. However, I started hearing about how such a small percentage of recyclable plastic is actually recycled. Is this true? If so, why are we still recycling? Is recycling doing any good?
    I've been hearing about all the microplastic in the oceans, etc. The amount of plastic that we use is astronomical as you so elegantly showed. I certainly understand that there's a problem and that the "plastics industry" could be avoiding taking responsibility for the problem as well as the consumer agreeing to continue to use plastics. There are so many advantages of plastics over the use of metals and leather (though there are advantages to metal and leather over plastics). Our society has chosen plastics partly for its disposability and partly for its easy moldability. As you say, plastics has made a lot of people and companies a lot of money.
    But, the fact is, we will likely not stop using plastics for a long time or until something better comes along. And, of course, that something better may generate its own set of unforeseen problems down the road. There are just so many factors at work - our population explosion, addiction to a throw away culture, etc. We're all looking for better ways to accomodate the status quo (better sources of energy, establishing a colony on Mars, etc) that haven't yet yielded answers. In the mean time, I'm not convinced that we shouldn't continue to recycle as best we can.

    • @bbgun061
      @bbgun061 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      From what I've learned, the amount of plastic that is recycled varies widely depending on where you live. Most "third world" countries hardly recycle at all. Many of them don't have any sort of waste collection at all. When people are struggling to survive, they can hardly be expected to worry about their trash. Most of the plastic waste in the oceans comes from rivers in these countries.
      In developed countries, plastic recycling varies a lot also. Some localities do very well, but others just burn the waste. Some have even shipped their trash overseas, with the intention of it getting recycled there, but that rarely happens.

    • @twoskies3226
      @twoskies3226 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      So long as you accept that you're doing it so that you feel better, and do not lend support to legislative expenditures and enforcement of the practice, then it is possible that by continuing to recycle you're not actively harming anyone.

    • @MrCaiobrz
      @MrCaiobrz 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Thankyou, the whole "only 5% is recycled" is random crap that I don't even know where it came from. China recycles their whole type 3 and even imports (ever wonder where the plastic barges go to?). Also, the tech is there and they are recyclable, it is people, companies and governments that don't want to invest in the cost of recycling. What people thought, that collecting, cleaning, separating and recycling was going to be cheaper than simply throwing away? of course its costlier. The point is not profit, its to avoid waste. Legislation also make a whole lot of difference, someone said third-world countries don't recycle? BS, it depends on the laws, some third-world recycled it all, others part, it depends on their laws and will to clean up. Brazil recycled most of its type 1 and 2 and is poor as heck, but you can be fined. China isn't exactly first world and still managed to get the huge facilities to recycle type 3 up and running. In Brazil, homeless people go through the garbage of buildings to pick plastic and paper to sell to recycing plants. I worked in an IT company that stored every plastic, cans and paper and would sell directly to recycling companies and divided the (tiny) money with all employees.
      Wanting to have all plastics recycled and still get a profit is the main problem with people who make this type of video. Recycling was never meant to be profitable. Cleaning up is always costlier than leaving it, and as we can't live without some plastics, we should pay the price to recycle them.

    • @JacobNeff-oq5km
      @JacobNeff-oq5km 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The simple fact is that plastic recycling IS a scam. Even when the plastic is free of any contamination (most isn't), it can at best only be recycled a few times before the polymers break down to unacceptable levels. IIRC, polystyrene degrades so quickly that it can't really be recycled even once.
      Until we invent a way to economically "digest" plastics down into the raw materials which can be synthesized back into virgin plastic, the only viable option is waste to energy.

  • @AudioThrift
    @AudioThrift 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +133

    I don’t know if anyone’s posted this yet but an easy way to ID Bakelite is to rub it until it’s slightly warm and smell it; if it smells a bit like formaldehyde, it’s probably bakelite. We do that to check jewelry at estate sales and thrift stores and stuff.

    • @ChakatSandwalker
      @ChakatSandwalker 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

      I wonder how many people would recognise formaldehyde's smell, though -- I certainly have no idea how it smells.

    • @cherylcampbell9369
      @cherylcampbell9369 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      It smells like bitter almond, i have heard.

    • @MrKittykat111
      @MrKittykat111 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      A lot of bake-lite products contain asbestos, so best not to do anything with it .

    • @robhulluk
      @robhulluk 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@cherylcampbell9369 No, that's cyanide that smells like bitter almonds.

    • @r.1599
      @r.1599 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      @@cherylcampbell9369 I don't know what bitter almond smells like, but because of the age of my building and stove, I sure know the smell of hot or burning bakelite (fuse box and stove parts).

  • @Merrifieldsam
    @Merrifieldsam 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +408

    The other problem is that large tech companies have started using "reducing plastic use" as an excuse to not include things like chargers or cables in their packaging so they can waste even more plastic by selling it to you separately!

    • @greg-op2jh
      @greg-op2jh 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      100%

    • @midnight8341
      @midnight8341 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +36

      Well, in the EU, you have to use USB-C as a charging port for your phone. And the cabels usually last longer than the phones, plus you get a cable for almost every other device, so it really doesn't matter because you always have 4+ USB cabels lying around.

    • @shurmurray
      @shurmurray 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

      Disagree. When i brought new phone/gadget/electronic toy and there is a type-C cable with a charger included - I already have like over 9000 of them laying in my drawer. And actually using only 2 to charge all my stuff (and sometimes just using the one usb cable permanently attached to a PC).
      Included cables and chargers are excessive and they are not free - you paid for that junk.
      So not including cable and charger does help with less plastic waste. A little bit.

    • @szulat
      @szulat 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@midnight8341 we have mandatory USB-C, so we can increase the amount of waste by dumping the still operational but obsolete micro usb and iphone cables and officially feel "green" while doing that 🤪

    • @notsam498
      @notsam498 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Uh no that's them being more responsible imo. I have bins full of extra cables that came with devices over the years. It's a reasonable expectation that the consumer has aftermarket cables or chargers. That saves huge amounts of plastics and other materials we should conserve too.... Like copper.

  • @FennecTECH
    @FennecTECH 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    I have a bag full of plastic grocery bags that end up being used for any number of things. Weather its carrying something somewhere. Cleaning up a mess like broken glass. Or even just as a garbage bag in the small garbage cans. They are perfect for taking cat litter out

  • @Alex-wn3lc
    @Alex-wn3lc 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +23

    Awesome to see this being brought to public attention! I’m a consultant packaging and process engineer and talk to companies about this everyday…It’s seldom to find one who knows half of this. This is what the public needs to understand for real change.

  • @stevenbower2278
    @stevenbower2278 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +41

    People now often say "recycling is a scam", removing the "plastic" part from the headline. I've seen tons of these comments and headlines.
    But that discourages all recycling, and the alternative to non-recyclable plastic packaging is recyclable packaging, which still requires the end consumer to separate their waste. There's no way around putting this on the consumer in some way; there is no other way to recover materials from the waste stream. So please still separate your waste. And yes, still separate your plastic waste, as otherwise this just ends up in a landfill. 5% of your plastic being recycled is better than 100% being dumped into a hole in the ground or into the ocean. Long term, the solution HAS to be a all-of-the-above approach: 1) reduce single use plastics, 2) stop dumping trash into oceans and rivers, 3) more r&d to find economical solutions to end-of-life plastics
    Even if all single use plastics were banned tomorrow, we'd still need to deal with the stuff that already exists. So practical solutions need to be created either way.

    • @jamescarter3196
      @jamescarter3196 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Seriously, it's appalling how many videos about recycling, even those that get in-depth about it, go the lowbrow clickbait route and kowtow to the 'angry at recycling' crowd by mentioning plastic and mindlessly pretending like 'it's the only thing that gets recycled and it doesn't even get recycled' and no part of that is true but people who just want to be lazy will invent reasons to pretend their laziness is 'intelligence' and it's pathetic.

    • @revenevan11
      @revenevan11 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      He did mention this in the video, that we should keep recycling for the small benefit. It is on the consumer to do that part it's true. But being mislead leads to this backlash and mistrust; thinking that we had made a larger impact in the problem and didn't have to worry or get in the way of they industry's profits. People were raised on this lie and put in a ton of effort and money, *That* is the part we're all angry about, and this willful deception and hiding of the problem for decades is why at its core it's the fault of these mega rich chemical companies. We need to ban single use plastics wherever possible without a major impact on quality of life, and we need to take the money for disposing of it safely and for the coming decades (or centuries) of cleanup of what's already in the environment from the companies that profited off of purposefully doing it (instead of from the taxpayers). If this leaves them with no profit then that's their punishment, no more of these fines that are a vanishingly small % of the profit they made from the crimes, deception, and flaunting regulations and ethics for decades. It's practically impossible not to contribute to this problem as a consumer, and short of violent action there's no way for an individual to make a meaningful difference. These companies need to be forced to reckon with the problem with more than PR lies and executives behind it need to face jail time (I know that part will never happen because our injustice system is designed to favor the rich). To be clear, I still recycle as much as I can for the slight difference it makes, but I know it's not even a decent mitigation let alone a solution when it comes to plastic.
      I'm not surprised people don't bother to recycle, it's psychologically similar and relatable to the oxycontin conspiracy leading to broader distrust in medical science. To the layperson it all seems the same, and since it was a real conspiracy it lends credence to BS conspiracy theories about vaccines that are dangerous. Those of us who know more about it can see through those as BS, but can we really fault their distrust after big pharma purposefully started the opioid epidemic for profit? I think the same is true regarding the loss of recycling motivation. I focus on recycling materials that I know have a much higher percentage, like paper & aliminum, but I still do try to recycle as much plastic as possible of the types that are locally accepted. But all the single use plastic wrap isn't even stamped with a mark lol, don't kid yourselves about where that ends up.

  • @terranhealer
    @terranhealer 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +38

    A furniture store was having problems with all of the styrofoam from the manufacture. They employed a device that melted down the styrofoam into bricks that could be used for building materials (they sold the bricks to other countries). The other countries could either build with the bricks, or reverse the process and remelt them while injecting air, turning them back into styrofoam 😮

    • @RolandsDad
      @RolandsDad 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

      You might notice a distinct lack of photos of all of the things that go to "other countries." It's tax write offs, and usually shuffled off to third world countries to sort out.
      It's permissible to believe anything willingly going to a different country as a "donation" is not to their benefit. This flows both ways.

    • @sennacherib_
      @sennacherib_ 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Why is this comment purposefully vague? Which furniture store? What was the device called? My BS alert is going off.

    • @terranhealer
      @terranhealer 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@sennacherib_ Lacks Furniture in the Rio Grande Valley (TX). This was over 10 years ago too…

  • @RGF19651
    @RGF19651 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +128

    In 2022, New Jersey enacted a ban on bags used at stores like grocery stores, hardware stores, garden stores, virtually all stores with few exceptions. This included the one time use plastic bags and even paper bags. It did cut down on the use of one time use plastic bags by about 80%, but it also banned paper bags which actually ARE recyclable and are often even made with recycled paper, and are also quickly biodegradable. Reducing plastic use was a good idea, but banning paper was a bone-head maneuver. Also stores began to sell polypropylene bags, which made the use of plastics go up by three times. In addition these heavier bags had a higher carbon footprint to manufacture, and in almost all cases are not even attempted to be recycled (even if it is a scam). So, I guess it falls under the category of “ no good deed will go unpunished”, or “be careful what you wish for”.

    • @creativeideas012
      @creativeideas012 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Any place replacing plastic grocery bags with plastic bags that you need to buy is a scam
      That's not how a ban works
      Industries have yet to be 'inconvenienced' with replacing all that plastic packaging

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      Here in the UK shops are required to make a nominal charge for a plastic bag. The proceeds usually go to charity and plastic bag use has gone down by a lot.

    • @eugenetswong
      @eugenetswong 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      I don't think that it really helped. Now people dispose of cloth bags, and use produce bags to carry things that typically were not carried in such bags.

    • @creativeideas012
      @creativeideas012 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Stating facts is now offensive
      My comments keep getting deleted smh

    • @JonMartinYXD
      @JonMartinYXD 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

      I've been using reusable plastic bags from my nearest grocery store for 19 years now, and I've used them for all the shopping I have done. Hardware store? I bring that bag. Picking up takeout food? I tell them not to bag it (it is already in a container anyways?) because I've got my own. I've been on my third bag for a while now, and with the condition it is in, it has a lot of life left. Would it be better if they were made of some plant fibre instead of plastic? Yes. But in 19 years I have had to throw out two worn out reusable plastic bags. Tell me that isn't a multiple orders of magnitude reduction in harm to the environment. The demand for perfection can be the enemy of progress.

  • @GroovingPict
    @GroovingPict 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +24

    Celluloid is also why something like 90% of all silent movies ever made are now lost movies; those films caught fire and if one film in a storage facility caught fire, well... the other highly flammable rolls of film werent not gonna join in the party now were they.

  • @TheVagrantMentalist
    @TheVagrantMentalist 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I read somewhere about the discovery of plastic eating bacteria. It isn't recycling by any means but it is a possible solution to the sheer number of plastic waste.

  • @mikoske
    @mikoske 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +88

    Finland is pretty good at recycling plastic. For bottles it's over 90%, and it's been recycled for decades. Rest of the plastics is way lower, but we sort the food plastic packages and all sort of wrappings and plastic bags now, and they get reused quite a bit. Some plastics will be burned for energy, apparently it is cleaner than regular oil.

    • @saiv46
      @saiv46 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Burning stuff is a last ditch effort to prevent pollution, but even then somehow government fucked this up and we have landfills instead.

    • @walleywalley
      @walleywalley 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      EU banned plastic food containers, they are now from paper or other organic matters. this is only way.

    • @BlueBD
      @BlueBD 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      The general issue with burning plastic is more of the toxic fumes it spits out. Which is more of a problem if your burning it in like a fire pit rather then on an industrial level where its in a furnace and the gases are expelled away from where the people physically are like though a exhaust stack.

    • @kvernesdotten
      @kvernesdotten 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +19

      Are you talking about the rate at which it actually gets recycled, or the rate at which its collected for recycling? Because those are not the same thing. Every type of plastic needs its own facility with its own processes, which is incredibly ineffective because it needs to be centralized and transported on top of the ridiculous energy requirement to perform the recycling at all. If we are talking about plastic bottles, those are usually made from PET, and last time I checked all of the nordics shipped theirs to a PET compatible facility in Sweden for processing where they process whatever they have capacity for and ship the rest to Australia for some ungodly reason.
      I mean, this might be outdated at this point, I dont know. But the point is just that the nordic countries like to tell both ourselves and everyone else that we are much better at this than we really are. We are for sure better than alot of places in the world, but theres plenty of lies and coverups here too. Even though if anyone should have made it, it should have been our tiny countries with almost no population to produce the waste.
      Edit: typos

    • @SeanBZA
      @SeanBZA 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Burning many plastics containing PVC means that, in addition to producing lots of dioxin, you also create hydrochloric acid, which is absolutely going to result in acid rain, or you have to scrub it out, making you now have a bigger problem to dispose of. In addition the acid will destroy the furnace fast as well.

  • @dimitri877
    @dimitri877 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +64

    I applaud you for bringing this to the attention of your audience. This elephant hardly ever gets addressed. 👏👏
    Denmark recently banned recycled packaging plastics for food items for long term studies have found recycled plastics release carcinogens. PET bottles can't be recycled as such since they can't be decontaminated enough for reuse (without damaging the plastic). So they are used to create fabrics or mixed in with other plastics to make roadside posts or park bench seats. After that it becomes landfill.
    The solution would indeed be to make less disposable plastics to begin with (along with countless other disposables or things we regard as disposable (like clothing and consumer electronics)).

    • @pleasedontwatchthese9593
      @pleasedontwatchthese9593 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I was felling the opposite, I feel like many people have made a recycled plastic is bad video years ago

    • @tribalismblindsthembutnoty124
      @tribalismblindsthembutnoty124 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      And he didn't include this fact: The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) reports that nearly all of the current demand for elephant ivory comes from the Chinese market.

  • @Paul-pj5qu
    @Paul-pj5qu 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I never threw out plastic bags or at least rarely did so. The main plastic bags of course came from grocery stores. I used virtually all of these for garbage disposal. Now that these bags of essentially been banned, I have to buy plastic bags to throw into the garbage.

  • @TheRealE.B.
    @TheRealE.B. 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +26

    I've noticed that shippers tend to aggressively wrap glass bottles (which have been transported by truck over bumpy roadways for more than a century without much problem) in bubble wrap as if they're fragile, expensive glass figurines.
    Once, I even got a package of mixed glass bottles and metal bottles. The less-wrapped metal bottles were dented... by the much more aggressively wrapped but stronger glass bottles. (Didn't wrap the hard corners though, I guess.)
    Just throw in some crinkled paper that takes up space so they don't roll around lol.

    • @paavobergmann4920
      @paavobergmann4920 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      in the olden tymes, there were wooden strips to separate the bottles in the crate. Problem solved.

    • @asteroidrules
      @asteroidrules 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Packaging is a dying art, people really don't get how to properly wrap and ship stuff.

    • @TheRealE.B.
      @TheRealE.B. 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@asteroidrules Honestly, lots of things are a dying art... as the Venn diagram of "Jobs That Are Useful to Society" and "Jobs That Pay A Living Wage" continues to diverge.

  • @paulknight5018
    @paulknight5018 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +196

    In Germany and Holland, the deposit model for cans and bottles is still there, its a bit random seeing homeless people picking through bins for the cans and bottles, but you get the money back at supermarkets and you don't even have to use the same one, so that can only be a good thing. I think Scotland is also trailing it. Going back to glass and aluminium has got to be better as they really are recycled ♻️

    • @spidalack
      @spidalack 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      We do the same thing in Quebec, Canada.

    • @pauliusUwU
      @pauliusUwU 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Same in Lithuania.

    • @TheLumberjack1987
      @TheLumberjack1987 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

      Same thing in Austria, most supermarkets have a machine where you can put your bottles in and then it prints a little coupon which you can use at the cash register.
      I imagine it's the same system as in Germany and Holland.

    • @davedujour1
      @davedujour1 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

      Iowa, Michigan, and California also has a $0.05 surcharge for aluminum cans, although they have to come back uncrushed (at least in Iowa) to show they all have the correct code printed on them. Which means it's often more hassle than crushing all the cans and taking them somewhere in bulk.

    • @tonymouannes
      @tonymouannes 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      California has that system without, just without the redemption part. You technically can get your money back from reclycling centers, but that's not practical or even financially worth it, unless you're a heavy bottle/can user.

  • @No_Way_NO_WAY
    @No_Way_NO_WAY 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Our company worked with recycled PP or at least with a manufacturer that recycles them.
    In a meeting they stated, that if you use new material, you can have every color you want. If you recycle the material for the first time, the best they can do is gray and starting with the second loop it gotta be black. Otherwise the color would be all over the place since the recycled material (even if the pellets are from the "same" color) is not uniform.

    • @leehaelters6182
      @leehaelters6182 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      So, let the color be all over the place. Must be some more folks like me that say "Who cares?"

  • @oscilot666
    @oscilot666 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    I work for a plastics recycling company in New Zealand. We recycle hundreds of tonnes of polyprop (5) and low density (4) every year. Mainly from companys who manufacture products from said plastics that didn't pass inspection.. so small win🎉

  • @xlr8436
    @xlr8436 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +106

    In Australia, there was a soft plastics recycling program called RedCycle where you could drop off soft plastics like plastic bags, wrapping and films.
    But turns out they were lying and just stored it in warehouses.

    • @Australian_Made
      @Australian_Made 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      Yeah ~~~ they be doing that over & over & over. There are literally hundreds of these warehouses filled to the rooftops with COMPRESSED PLASTIC.

    • @greg-op2jh
      @greg-op2jh 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      What a shock.

    • @xlr8436
      @xlr8436 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@Australian_Madename checks out!

    • @jayfrank1913
      @jayfrank1913 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      In my town you have to pay $7 per garbage bag full of "plastic film" to "recycle" it. I just skip the payment and toss it in the garbage as it all ends up in the same landfill, if you're lucky and it's not burned or shipped overseas.

    • @paniccat502
      @paniccat502 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Tbh it's good thing then being all around us or burning it

  • @palladin9479
    @palladin9479 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Ok mostly good but some very bad info here, especially near the end about incineration and chemical reprocessing. Incineration is not a regular burn barrel, that would release a bunch of toxic gases and is very much illegal at industrial scale. Instead what they use is a Plasma Incinerator, which is actually as cool as the a name sounds. It's a machine that use's plasma arcs, similar to what welder use, to cause the molecules inside the trash to break all chemical bonds. We are talking temperatures of 3500-6500 °C, that's instantaneous atomization of all trash that gets dumped through those arcs. The heavier elements like iron, zinc, and silicon fall to the bottom where they turn into asphalt and are used to pave roads. The lighter elements like hydrogen, carbon, oxygen and nitrogen rise to the top where they cool and form very useful chemicals and are separated out and sold to chemical processing plants. Specifically the hydrogen, carbon and oxygen form a hydrocarbon called syngas that can then be burned for energy to power the incinerator, though they later found the gas is more profitable to sell to chemical processing as it's super useful to them. Modern "chemical reprocessing" is very successful because you don't try to mix chemicals but instead just atomize the whole thing and let gravity and thermodynamics sort out the result. What needed to happen between the 70/80's and now is the cost of Plasma Incinerators to be reduced by commercialization instead of being niche bespoke facilities.
    Basically Plasma Incineration is the ultimate "I Win" button for waste disposal, you put waste in and useful stuff comes out. The requirements are a large upfront capital investment and a nearby supply of energy to power it. And just like Nuclear the Green lobby absolutely hates it.
    news.mit.edu/2021/inentec-turning-trash-into-valuable-chemical-products-clean-fuels-0106

  • @felicidoo2
    @felicidoo2 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Joe, I have been watching your videos for several years now but I’ve never commented. I just want to thank you for sharing your knowledge and research with the public. We need more critical thinkers who have open minds and kind hearts. People like you, who do their research instead of spouting off their unfounded opinions. Your content is highly educational and I truly appreciate you. Thank you for contributing to the wellbeing of society.

  • @4dirt2racer0
    @4dirt2racer0 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    around 5:06 i was just thinking that same thing, thats probably the motivating factor for most advancements most of the time.. not because its better for the animals..but simply because its cheaper..

  • @Fastlan3
    @Fastlan3 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    This topic deserves a series... That way you can tackle a lot more. Such as recycling not just plastics, but metals, glass and so on... Probably include different industry issues and companies / organizations attemping to deal with the dilemmas involved.

  • @faithpoggioli4665
    @faithpoggioli4665 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

    I go to a university where they have recycling bins located all around campus, and they posted these signs right above them telling us what items are recyclable. Due to this, I would be extra cautious about what items needed to go in the recycling bins and what items didn't. One day when I was about to recycle some of my items, however, a friend told me that they don't even recycle those items at all. Instead, they just toss all of them into the trash with non-recyclable items. I know this is probably common on other college campuses, but it still makes me upset that they would do something like that where they try encouraging students to recycle when in actuality they don't even recycle the items in the first place.

    • @i_love_rescue_animals
      @i_love_rescue_animals 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      That's really depressing - especially for aluminum cans or glass - those are the two materials that are the best recycled and the material doesn't degrade as it is continually recycled. 🙁

    • @faithpoggioli4665
      @faithpoggioli4665 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@i_love_rescue_animals Definitely agree!

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@i_love_rescue_animals glass isn't recyclable. At least most colors aren't.

    • @ktrimbach5771
      @ktrimbach5771 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yea, but is it true? Some places do recycle. You need to check it out!

  • @thomasdickson35
    @thomasdickson35 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I've been called out by both people I know and strangers for reusing plastic bottles because it's either "classless" or it looks like it's got booze in it, as if you can't put alcohol in a $100 yeti bottle. It's a container. It works. I use it.
    I can't believe we've ended up in a place where reuse is stigmatized. Same with zip close bags. Why would you wash a thick, durable plastic bag that had bread in it?
    I've actually met people that only wear underwear once and then throw them away. Repulsive but true.

    • @dr.blockcraft6633
      @dr.blockcraft6633 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Depending on The type Of plastic Bottle it Can be Dangerous to Reuse them, And can Cause you To get A bacterial Infection, and Swallow more Plastics n Stuff.

  • @marthanewsome6375
    @marthanewsome6375 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

    This reminds me of what happened in Australia. They banned plastic shopping bags that were reused by most people as garbage bin liners afterwards. Instead people need to buy reusable plastic shopping bags now and buy plastic garbage bag liners for their tiny bins.

    • @Appletank8
      @Appletank8 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Your mileage may vary, but compostable bags do exist as an option at least. Their long-term lifespan is a bit questionable (since they're supposed to decompose within months) but for single use cases, it might be viable.

  • @Reaper_sun
    @Reaper_sun 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +31

    As someone who lives in the Netherlands studying environmental innovations the 5% recycling is wild. In the Netherlands about 40%-50% of all plastics collected to be recycled actually gets recycled and municipalities can be really strict about separating certain types of trash, since they can get fined by the waste processors if the waste they collect is too polluted. There are also laws which state that manufacturers need to recycle a certain amount of their plastic packaging (for example: a minimum of 90% of plastic bottles which hold over 3L must be recycled by the manufacturer).
    We also have deposits on plastic almost all plastic bottles, beer bottles, beer crates and also drink cans. You pay a deposit of around 15 cents extra when you buy it (if it's a bottle and it will be per item which is withing that 'deposit system') and when you've finished using it you can hand it in at a supermarket, get a receipt with the money you get back from your deposit and when they scan that receipt at the cash register you either get that amount of money discounted from your purchase or just get the money back. All the bottles and such that got handed in are picked up from stores to be recycled, which gives pretty clean waste flows of plastic and glass bottles for example to be recycled, since they tend to be the same kind of plastics (or glass). This system is pretty common in Europe from my experience and it works pretty great.
    Also, hearing about burning the plastic to get energy out of it would be another form of recycling hurts me. RIP the waste hierarchy T-T
    The sketch was really funny, especially the 'recycling symbol' and the 2 in the middle of it, more of those!
    I also want to say thank you for this video and all the other video's you've made over the years! Your channel really got me into sustainability and environmental stuff, it's one of the biggest reasons I chose this study (together with a guaranteed job lol) and I'm really happy I did choose this, it's so interesting!

    • @gmosc
      @gmosc 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I'm assuming the recycling number here in Denmark are the same. I'm not in the industry so it's an assumption.

  • @benashcroft4104
    @benashcroft4104 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    It's honestly concerning how many comments are talking about throwing plastics in the trash based on this video. Do your research, find out what is recyclable in your area (because it does vary but all 7 numbers exist for a reason) and recycle the right things. Just because a system isn't as effective as it is sold as doesn't mean you shouldn't participate

  • @Savethecatgirls
    @Savethecatgirls 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    regarding packaging, we have improved a lot with plastic use. I remember as a kid there was the thick molded plastic packaging that needed scissors to get inside and then within that would be more of the same plastic to support the product. The amount of plastic for that one product could probably make hundreds of plastic bags. We still see plastic in packaging a lot but the volume used is much less I think. Still hope we can minimize even more though.

  • @Lorre982
    @Lorre982 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +20

    Across EU states the recyclabe bin are color coded, green is glass, yellow is plastic, brown is for compost / food waste, grey is for non Recyclabe, blue for papers, there are battery bin across the town, there are used vegetable oil bins, if you have a broken eletronics you biring to the near eletroncs shops and they will bring to the recycling center.

    • @ktrimbach5771
      @ktrimbach5771 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      They used to have us separate recyclables like that, but people were too lazy or whatever, so they stopped. It’s all ”single-stream” recycling now. Even that seems to be beyond many peoples’ capacity at this point. 🙄

    • @jeffbenton6183
      @jeffbenton6183 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@ktrimbach5771 The bigger problem then people not even bothering to recycle in the US is that people put things that are not recyclable into the bins in case it might be recyclable ("wish--cycling"). This can mess up the whole process preventing a bunch of the things which could've been recycled to not be recycled.

  • @jasonciola1783
    @jasonciola1783 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I work in Alzheimer’s research, yesterday we received a package with a styrofoam container about 24”x12”x18” on the interior. Inside was about 20-24 bricks of dry ice, each within plastic packaging, all used to cool a box maybe 6” in all dimensions. Inside is some plastic air filled filler for cushioning, all for a vial of 1ml of an antibody. In total a cylinder maybe 1 in tall and a quarter of an inch in diameter. Typically we just get something the size of the 6in box filled with dry ice or something else to keep the item cool

  • @lostbutfreesoul
    @lostbutfreesoul 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

    There was something I read a while ago, and I believe it might be true:
    Whenever Fuel use dips, more 'disposable plastic' turns up in shipping....

  • @MagicHasArrived
    @MagicHasArrived 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

    That transition back from the tangent cam was so smooth. I see the little things that have improved on your channel over time and want you to know that the work doesn't go unnoticed! The videos you put out are so high quality these days, especially compared to just a few years ago! Super happy for you and your team (someone there should probably get the credit for that transition, I see you unnamed hero!) Wishing you guys all the best!

  • @rocketkc8576
    @rocketkc8576 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    When you said most importantly (@ 29:20) I was hoping to hear 'what we should do with these classification differently to help solve the problem' rather than what harm they bring. I get that, and like many who watched your video for longer period of time than we usually spend on making a meal, the take away is depressing and most will do nothing about it. May I suggest that you share more findings about the benefits of the system that we can do differently within our household level of effort? Any effort helps to encourage others to look further into a solution rather than a problem. Thank you for your work and time. You have a way to captivate audience, thanks for having it do good. Be Kind...Mankind

  • @emaarredondo-librarian
    @emaarredondo-librarian 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    28:44. I sell old books online. I wrap them with one layer of paper (or more if a long trip, newspapers work fine as cushions), one plastic bag for impermeabilization, and the cardboard envelope required by my post office - recycled boxes. When I buy anything online, it indeed comes buried in a Napoleonic system of plastic sepulchre.

    • @cicadaonthewall
      @cicadaonthewall 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I wrap all the clothing, etc as well, I found a company that does biodegradable plastic bags....I think it's made out of plant material. It's a little more expensive, but worth the piece of mind.

  • @jaredkennedy6576
    @jaredkennedy6576 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +28

    While you were ranting about the multiple layers of plastic, I was unboxing parts at work. They were in zip lock bags, and instead of putting the part tags in them or getting wild and sticking the adhesive part tags to the bags, they put the bagged part and tag in another larger zip lock bag.

    • @Boodlums
      @Boodlums 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Sounds like Digi-Key?

  • @joannaatkins822
    @joannaatkins822 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I think part of the problem with the plastics industry is treating it like a private capitalist problem rather than a systemic thing that affects us all.
    The fact that plastics and related industries *have* to make a profit is leaving the inherent issues up to capitalists on a cost/return model.
    Pyrolysis and related methods of recycling traditionally incinerated plastics do take more money and energy to refine, but if these systems ran only when the electricity grids were producing excess energy from green power like solar and wind during the day, then all that previously wasted captured energy would be doing useful work instead of just applying the brakes on turbines.

  • @kdshowz
    @kdshowz 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

    As someone who does sell things online, I wish I could reduce the plastic, but here are some of the issues I would face:
    1- Customers will complain about the protection of the item (and still do, despite there is more than enough)
    2- Shipping companies UPS and FedEx handle the packages worse than an airport worker handling your luggage
    3- Every complaint will end up with losses in business and bad reviews
    So till customers start understand why, and online platforms like amazon take some measures to protect the sellers, and the shipping companies be responsible for their handling the goods, people will continue doing this

    • @rogerphelps9939
      @rogerphelps9939 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Use cardboard.

    • @nicolasmariotti
      @nicolasmariotti 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Your example is very interesting and shows once again that we live in a really complex world...

  • @dirksays
    @dirksays 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    This should be talked about more! Everyone should consider the container their food comes in when making a purchase. My wife seeks out glass and metal containers, I seek out bulk food so the packaging is less, and find ways to use extra big chip bags and containers, like garbage bags and shop storage. I hardly use ziplock bags, and use bags food comes in for packing sandwiches and chips for lunch. My in-laws even washes bags and plastic silverware to reuse. Make food from scratch, less packaging! Plastic and rubber does have a shelf life, a mechanic told me 7 years is the shelf life they use for car parts. And I seen a pair of rollerblades fall apart after siting in box, hardly used after 15-20 years. The oily film on plastics and rubber is the material braking down.

  • @PurpleRhymesWithOrange
    @PurpleRhymesWithOrange 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    It has always bothered me that in "Reduce, Reuse, Recycle" that is never any mention of Repair. Corporation of course want to th throw everything away and replace it with new items. Some even make great efforts to prevent anyone from repairing their products. When I lived in a college town I made a good side hussle of collecting the broken furniture and household appliances the students threw out when they went home for the summer, fixing it up and selling it back to the students when they returned in September.

  • @annakeye
    @annakeye 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +27

    Your mention of the boom pole reminds me of my horror at the amount of plastic used in move logistics, such as the transportation of pallets (which are also often made of plastics) of goods to stores, such as supermarkets and various stores. They're wrapped and wrapped and wrapped again in plastic, which is cut off and put in the bin. The amount of plastic used on one measures around 2m (height) x 15m (length) for a 1m x 1.2m pallet. I just typed into google 'pallet wrapping' and was astounded, and yet I dealt with these things on a thrice weekly basis at one point. At xmas time, the problem tripled.

    • @Rocketsong
      @Rocketsong 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Plastic pallets are great though. Durable, highly reusable, and basically mandatory for international shipping. If I want to ship a pallet of freight from the US to Canada I either have to use a plastic pallet, or a wooden pallet that has been chemically treated and certified as such. This is to prevent the spread of wood-born parasites, disease, and insects.

    • @grn1
      @grn1 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@Rocketsong I think their point was more that the pallets, which are already plastic, are wrapped in a ton more plastic that just gets thrown away.

    • @Rocketsong
      @Rocketsong 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@grn1 yeah. The pallets get used over and over and over. The giant rolls of cling wrap type plastic are pretty much mandated by shipping companies.

    • @prich0382
      @prich0382 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@RocketsongPlastic palets are garbage, if they are damaged, they can't eaily be repaird, wodden ones can have planks or blocks replaced

    • @grn1
      @grn1 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@Rocketsong We've had to add extra packing to some stuff at my job because the receiving company had problems with stuff falling out, a problem we never had in house or in transit so you can probably guess where the issue is. We do sometimes use the plastic wrap as a temporary wrap for coils that we have to rewrap (I work at a press shop), usually it's not too much and we only use it on super lightweight stuff where a metal band doesn't make sense. Fortunately most jobs we run until the end of our last coil (rewinding a coil can be a major pain).

  • @ddamindu
    @ddamindu 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +18

    Even though recycling is a huge problem we even wrap potatoes in little plastic covers these days

  • @Mark_Proton
    @Mark_Proton 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I learned a lot of this when researching why I can't just reuse failed 3D prints to melt it into filament. I now keep track what manufacturer I've used for what part, which is a major pain in the arse, AND I haven't gotten round to making the recycler yet.

  • @MartinBVDK
    @MartinBVDK 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    Here in Denmark, we are by law required to sort our trash into 10 categories, one of which is plastics. A professor claimed on the news that his research team could extract more plastic from incinerator smoke than could be extracted by sorting the trash.
    Not idea how that would work though.

    • @grn1
      @grn1 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I can just about guarantee it wouldn't. It would be cheaper for his corporate sponsors to implement though.

  • @Yesica1993
    @Yesica1993 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +370

    Ok, am I the only one who felt sorry for the husband at the opening sketch? You just know the poor guy is kept chained in the basement and fed leftover cat food.

    • @pedrocruz4409
      @pedrocruz4409 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

      He’s also impotent

    • @bob2600
      @bob2600 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +32

      I skipped it. Couples "comedy" is cringe.

    • @Big_Tex
      @Big_Tex 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Oh no. That scenario calls for a strict diet of fish heads.

    • @zk4761
      @zk4761 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

      Karen was quite harsh.

    • @chriskola3822
      @chriskola3822 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +39

      Yeah, swap roles and suddenly everyone wouldn't think it is funny.

  • @jfmezei
    @jfmezei 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    The reason for the switch from glass to plastic soda bottles is simple: with larger format bottle sbeing introduced, it was found that accidentally tipping a flass soda bottle could cause it to explode with glass shrapnel causing major injury on people. The industry was VERY VERY quick to change the large formet to plastic to avoid being sued whenever such a bottle exploded.

    • @frequentlycynical642
      @frequentlycynical642 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Absolutely NOTHING to do with accidents or safety. Companies no longer would have to transport heavy glass bottles two ways, then clean them before refilling. Plastic was light weight and out the door once. Simple economics. You've got a pretty active imagination.

    • @jfmezei
      @jfmezei 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@frequentlycynical642 Google for "The explosive pop-bottle problem of 1979" , a video report from the Canadian CBC. I recall accidents becoming frequentt and the large size glass bottle recalled at one point. That report preceeded a ban by the government of large format pop bottles due to risk of expliosion. Note that Canada had gone Metric and USA had not, so different bottle shapes/sizes in effect. So not my imagination.

  • @CaedenV
    @CaedenV 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +13

    Silver lining (but not yet a ray of sunshine) is the research being done in Japan with engineering bacteria that can break down plastics.
    ...and by engineer, I mean, randomly stumbled on, and trying to improve.
    Still, it's going to be a bit, but this is probably our best hope for dealing with the plastics issue any time soon.

    • @c_douglasdillion745
      @c_douglasdillion745 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Also read researchers at Rice University have found a way to separate hydrogen from plastics...and the carbon to make graphene (to which there is a ready market). They may be able to even use plastics from the environment.
      Scaling this up is always a challenge, however and there are energy concerns. That's one of the big hurtles with recycling...energy. With more, cheaper viable energy our recycling efforts for anything would explode. After all, our World is not made of virgin material but rather recycled from dead stars.

    • @E1Luch
      @E1Luch 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Imagine this bacteria runs wild and starts eating plastics that are still in use

    • @jneilson7568
      @jneilson7568 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@E1Luchit is begging to be the headline you see in the movie's opening credits, right as the world's ended by the plastic eating bacteria as it goes amok/mutates into eating everything else.

    • @MrAlexOrex
      @MrAlexOrex 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      ​@@E1LuchThere is an old (1971) book "Mutant 59: The Plastic Eater"

    • @novacorponline
      @novacorponline 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@E1Luch That was the first thing I thought of when I first saw that headline... One lab leak and we could have a global incident where plastic just no longer is viable anymore.

  • @ptonpc
    @ptonpc 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    In the UK (I don't know if it is still the case) recycling companies were able to claim tax credits for recycling waste. The catch was, if the company processed it in the UK, it could only claim for the material it successfully recycled, having to pay to dispose of anything it couldn't. Meanwhile, a company that just exported the unsorted waste could claim 100% of the credit. It didn't even have to go to a recycling plant abroad, it just had to *leave* the UK. Of course, if the exporter could sell the waste, even better, but it could still make a profit just loading up a container, picking somewhere on the map and shipping it out.
    The government wanted to claim recycling was going up but didn't want to invest in the infrastructure required to do so.

    • @talideon
      @talideon 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Let me guess: this was under the Tories, right?

  • @johnwesner3935
    @johnwesner3935 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Also regarding recycling, the consumer must clean any and all residual product from the containers. In our home we do, but primarily to eliminate/ prevent pest issues. Heinz recently spent nine months and millions of dollars to create a recyclable top for the ketchup bottles. Plastic. It seems that not that many years ago ketchup came in a glass bottle with a metal screw top!? Waste 100 years ago was primarily glass and tin. During my career in construction we would occasionally unearth old dump sites. Sadly it was quite common for pretty much any ditch or rock pile to also become a dump for anything that wouldn't burn in the burn barrel. Burn barrel. We're back to burning. We used to have paper cups, straws, packaging, ... Cloth flour sacks became dish cloths and pillow cases. Anyway, repurpose and reuse. Get rid of plastic bags and water bottles!!!!😢

  • @Susie_Floozie
    @Susie_Floozie 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    I was crazy for polystyrene #6 for a while due to it having same composition as ShrinkyDink craft plastic. It came out of the oven a little thicker than the real stuff, but that was fine by me. I'd look for the stamp with PS6 on it and harvest the plastic. It was used as crystal-clear packaging on baked goods, salads, and to-go containers, so I could find a lot of it. A cover on a big sheet cake gave me a huge sheet of PS6 to make particularly large pieces. But PS6 had a certain brittleness to its matrix, so it's been replaced with more flexible PETE plastics. So, dang it.

  • @gregreilly7328
    @gregreilly7328 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Looking forward to the Nebula video for further exploration. Having worked in plastics, I was thrown by the suggestion that Low Density PolyEthylene and PolyStyrene, 4 and 6, were considered non-recyclable. Sure they are sensitive to heat, low temperature required, but still useful. Number 5, PolyPropylene, is uncertain for me. But quite curious as to the excuse for 4 and 6 being considered non-recyclable.
    Anywho, great video! Thanks! Will see this Nebula video.

  • @momoski68
    @momoski68 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I remember shopping and everything was in paper and glass. Yaknow, truly sustainable stuff. Then all the whackos started complaining about it. Now we pack most of our foods in petrochemicals lol. My mom with an eighth grade education knew we were on the wrong path.

  • @MarylandFarmer.
    @MarylandFarmer. 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    Even at our local level of recycling collection they put a lot on the consumer. Instead of just sorting it all themselves they try to educate the thousands of residents on what types are ok to put in the bin but then get mad when people don't understand.
    Our local area just banned plastic shopping bags and it's even had an impact further out as it's easier for stores to make a change by region rather than one by one. I overheard some guys complaining about how will they carry things but guess what they have paper bags again for the 5 people that don't have an overflowing stash of reusable ones. On a personal level I try not to stress about what I buy but I do look for non plastic packaging or buy used when I can. I wouldn't want to live in a completely plastic free world but this single use stuff has got to be reigned in.

    • @TheLumberjack1987
      @TheLumberjack1987 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      "people that don't have an overflowing stash of reusable ones"
      That one really hit home, I've never once bought a grocery bag yet the drawer is overflowing with bags made of paper and fabric.
      Other than having forgotten to take a bag with you there's literally no excuse to use the plastic bags from the store.

  • @rossgirven5163
    @rossgirven5163 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +12

    I was looking into the issue of wind turbine blades.
    I found several companies saying they were recycling them to make concrete….
    Turned out they burn them to produce the heat to make concrete!

    • @E1Luch
      @E1Luch 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The volume of waste from turbines is extremely low. For 20 years of your electricity consumption you'd get like 10kg blade waste total. Its literally nothing, especially if you compare it to single-use plastics

    • @rossgirven5163
      @rossgirven5163 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@E1Luch not 100% sure where you are coming from here.
      Turbine blades get replaced every 20 years or so.
      The blade assembly of the GE 1.5MW turbine (one of the most common) weighs 36 tons.
      So every 20 years around 36 tons of non recyclable waste is being produced per turbine.
      Times that by the number of turbines around the world and the numbers get ridiculous.
      I get that is does not compare to single use plastics, but it is still massive contributor to our waste production.
      And ultimately not all that green in my personal opinion.
      If the only solution at present is to incinerate them for energy then that makes it even worse!

    • @E1Luch
      @E1Luch 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@rossgirven5163 I think my reply got deleted for some reason, but again, the volume of this waste is relatively low. Its 4-8 metric tons per year at most, if all 8 billion people used wind for all their energy needs, and they all consume like an average european. We can realically landfill it all for the next 100 years if we wanted. Even if we burned it, we will have way less pollution because of low volume, because it replaces fossil fuels, and because proper incineration plants should have good exhaust filters. But I also think we will use it for something else eventually, and I think converting it into some other carbon-containing molecule is also a good option

  • @bazoo513
    @bazoo513 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    13:55 - We do that in Europe. For example, here in Croatia stores are obligated to "buy" every liquid container over, I think, 200 ml for 7 Euro cents (it is more elsewhere in Europe), sort them and recycle. The material is usually PET, glass and aluminum. (Of course, they charge those 7 cents when you buy your drink; they even have to state that on the receipt.)
    When _I_ was young, 50 years ago, we would just swap empty bottles for full, or, if we didn't have an empty one, pay some small refundable amount for the bottle. Same princople, but more complicated than today.
    I don't return my bottles to stores, but collectet them in large bag (more often paper than plastic) and, when full, deposit it next to the plastic recycling container. Somebody always collects them within perhaps an hour, often sooner. It is a sad that quite a few people live off this.

  • @deathroll69
    @deathroll69 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +7

    I have seen some videos on Bacteria designed to eat plastics. I would be curious to see a video like that from you, not sure if you have done one like that yet.

    • @knarfweasel
      @knarfweasel 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Ive wondered about that, and I've concluded that if a plastic eating bacteria were to evolve it would rapidly spread across the globe and would deteriorate plastics in such a way that would require many of the components on your car to be replaced frequently. I think it would spur the development of plastics that cannot be digested by the bacteria, and this we would be back where we started

    • @OhhCrapGuy
      @OhhCrapGuy 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@knarfweaselthat's actually the basis of a nightmare scenario that runs through my head from time to time.
      When we burn plastics, it's quite clear that breaking those chemical bonds releases a rather meaningful amount of energy, so I don't doubt that bacteria could produce an enzyme that can break down that bond and use the energy to produce ATP.
      Now, natural selection doesn't produce the best method option of doing things, it starts with anything at all, and only makes incremental improvements until no more improvements can be made.
      That means that the first bacteria to be able to get energy from breaking down plastics may start from a place that can get better, but there's very little guarantee that the byproducts of breaking it down won't be notably toxic to eukaryotic life like humans.
      And there's a lot of microplastics out there... A great deal of free food for the first bacteria species that can produce the enzyme necessary... in fact, we've laced just about every part of the planet with this free food.
      So if bacteria figures out how to break down plastic for food, it's going to very quickly find itself spreading across the planet, releasing vast amounts of different chemicals and heat.
      This is not unlike the Great Oxygen Catastrophe, where a bacteria figured out how to eat sunlight, another infinite free food supply, and released a truly horrific chemical in the air: diatomic oxygen.

    • @knarfweasel
      @knarfweasel 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@OhhCrapGuy thanks for the reply, that was very enlightening. I never thought to compare it to the great oxidation event, but if it were comparable, we would be in a very sticky situation.

    • @OhhCrapGuy
      @OhhCrapGuy 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@knarfweasel note that I am not a chemist or any such thing, I'm just a programmer. This scenario may be entirely impossible for reasons I don't understand.

  • @BlakeEM
    @BlakeEM 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    We do not ingest a credit card worth of plastics each week. This has never been directly studied, it just got sensationalized by the media. It should be common sense that this is BS, at least it seemed obvious to me and investigating it seems to show this to be the case.
    Speaking of BS, there was an episode on recycling that talked about this very subject, and was quite controversial at the time.

  • @dfuss2756
    @dfuss2756 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I am old. Therefore, I use glass (antiques like me), metal items like cast iron and metal cooking pans that I inherited from my family. It takes a lot of thought to work around the plastic items. I remember the day when shampoo, bleach, and household items came in glass bottles. The manufacturers don't want you to get rid of plastics. It is in your fridge, freezers, washers, dishwashers, and air-conditioners, just to name a few items.

  • @konayasai
    @konayasai 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    It's nice that DE shaving is making a resurgence. Not only can you get your disposable plastics use down to practically zero, it's also much much cheaper. There's a bit of effort to learn how to handle it and you have to dial in which blades work for you, but that's far easier than it sounds.

  • @GogiRegion
    @GogiRegion 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    While the resin numbers aren’t useful to most consumers, I’m still super glad that they exist because it helps me identify the food safety and temperature stability of given plastics.

  • @GogiRegion
    @GogiRegion 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I didn’t realize that so many of those resin numbers weren’t recyclable. My municipality accepts more than just 1 and 2, but who knows if those others get used.

  • @74Gee
    @74Gee 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    Recycling shouldn't have to make a profit. It should be funded by the plastics manufacturers. If 5% of plastics is currently recycled and the cost of doing that is Z, then the tax on manufacture should be Zx20 shared between the manufacturers by weight. Similar import duty on plastics too, it's not difficult to solve, it's just nobody has the balls to make it law.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      "It should be funded by the plastics manufacturers." Translation, the consumer should have to pay more.

    • @billthacker6527
      @billthacker6527 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      I like the approach I saw in Germany. If you sell a product like an appliance, the seller is responsible for disposing of the packaging materials, not the consumer. It gives manufacturers a good reason to reduce packaging to just what's needed instead of being wasteful with it. And to @1pcfred, yes, the cost gets passed to the consumers, but they would have had to pay to dispose of the packaging anyway, and this way there's less to dispose of.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@billthacker6527 I'm paying for a container every week anyways. I threw out a 16x32 foot pool in my trash. It took a while but I got rid of it.

    • @codenameajax7943
      @codenameajax7943 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@billthacker6527but it's not like there is an extra cost to me throwing it out.

    • @1harrismccarty
      @1harrismccarty 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      All vital industries should be nationalized. If society relies on it, society should control it.

  • @bikeny
    @bikeny 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thanks for not putting any music in your video while you are talking to us. I wish other YT hosts would stop doing it. I would not have lasted more than 30 seconds here if I heard any 'background music.' As for the 30 or so minutes of actual informative content, thank you for that as well. I'm older than you, but yeah, glass bottles were a real good thing. The bottle deposit laws though really helped reduce the amount of flat tires I got while bicycling. And, yes, they help with the litter problem as well. And I am now a subscriber.

  • @stevejohnston3194
    @stevejohnston3194 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Great video. Plastics go back to at least ancient Egypt which used linseed (flax seed) oil. Upon exposure to air, this forms a clear cross-linked plastic you can find covering some ancient coffins, for example. Linoleum flooring is a 19th century invention using hardened (polymerized, plasticized) linseed oil and sawdust.

  • @chrispawlow666
    @chrispawlow666 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Watch you on Nebula a lot. Great subject I remember the TV ads in Australia in the 70s Telling us to save the trees use plastic bags. It's just bs after bs when you start digging deeper into just about any subject. It all traces back to someone making money and profits.

  • @Embur12
    @Embur12 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I love how customers will say i won't grab a plastic bag so i won't pollute the ocean. It's hard to do when you're 1500 miles from the nearest ocean. It's easy to toss your plastic in the Pacific if you live in Indonesia as it doubles as their toilet.

  • @kuromiLayfe
    @kuromiLayfe 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I work with packaging plastics and LDPE (RIC 4) is easily recyclable while HDPE (RIC 2) is the one that is harder and more expensive to recycle (LDPE is thinner as low as 12 microns and breaks down much faster when using dissolvents while HDPE is 16 microns thick)

    • @zyxw2000
      @zyxw2000 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Interesting. Can you give me an example of LDPE and HDPE?

    • @kuromiLayfe
      @kuromiLayfe 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@zyxw2000 majority of plastics that are around 6 packs of soda cans are HDPE , PET is also closer to HDPE , plastic wrapping foil you find in stores LDPE.

  • @A.X.76
    @A.X.76 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Great content! Due to my line of work I see the actual recycling of plastic/ electronics etc and as an end user i see the work involved in recycling. That small percent is tremendous but we should use it up, make do, or do without
    The lid on a bottle (ABS) is more useable than the bottle. But a hatereraid bottle is a great water bottle many times over and if u lose it no biggie compared to the one users.

  • @justminibanana9128
    @justminibanana9128 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    21:28 was expecting him to say in their whole life not every week god that's a lot of plastic.

  • @tmutant
    @tmutant 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    13:50 I and my sisters would walk along the side of the highway picking up glass bottles to turn in. We could get enough just walking 2 miles to buy snacks and cokes at the Shell station closest to our house.

  • @drawingmomentum
    @drawingmomentum 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Tech needs to make an edible 'plastic'.
    I do remember that tv commercial from when I was about 10, and it had an impact on me then. I learned as an adult that he wasn't native, but his message was powerful. I'm a recycler in my own ways. I make art and functional items from all sorts of waste. I even papered a huge wall in my house with brown paper bags. I make handmade books from cereal boxes and potato chip bags. I reuse bags and plastic containers for food storage, seed saving. Cardboard goes in the compost... Someday, I'd love to be able to aford to buy a machine that remelts plastics into creative useful items and art.

  • @scientificperspective1604
    @scientificperspective1604 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I would require that every food or beverage container have a deposit required at the time of purchase, to be refunded when the container is returned. This would apply to restaurants, grocery stores, everything. Each component of a container which is normally separated during normal use would require its own deposit. This should ensure that nobody will ever elect me to a position where I would have the authority to enact or enforce such a law.

    • @Rocketsong
      @Rocketsong 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Deposits are good for limiting litter. It doesn't do anything for recycling, all you are doing is making a third party throw it in the trash.

    • @scientificperspective1604
      @scientificperspective1604 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Rocketsong Deposits result in packaging being changed to easily-recycled materials, such as glass, aluminum, steel, and paper. Drink cups used to all be paper.

  • @crazyrocket2900
    @crazyrocket2900 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    What's funny is that you know most of this if you've gone to someplace that recycles your plastics. It either doesn't care and is throwing all of the plastic away (maybe shipping it somewhere first) so they have one giant bin for all your plastics. Or there's a bin for Pete, a bin for the H one (number 2) and a trash bin, usually labeled "colored plastics" or maybe 3-7 plastics

  • @Soilfood365
    @Soilfood365 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    It may relieve some to know that here in Zambia, major Global North drinks companies including Coca-cola never stopped doing returnable glass bottles. They became far less common after about 2005, but you could always get them by the crate if you were early to the depot, and in some smaller towns they remained pretty common even before about 2020, from when a few half-hearted laws and public awareness seem to be giving them a bit of a resurgence even in the cities.

  • @testedTransgressor
    @testedTransgressor 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Fun little side note: HDPE can be used for rocket fuel. Housemate does hobby rocketry and was experimenting with it as an alternative to importing the normal motor types. Pretty rad stuff!

  • @zyxw2000
    @zyxw2000 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Wonderful, informative video. Just one little error at 21:08. The Great Pacific Garbage Patch isn't a big pile of items. The stuff has lots of water between each item, which is why it takes The Ocean Cleanup so long to scoop one area. It's more like a soup with floating rice.

  • @sussekind9717
    @sussekind9717 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I have always known about the resin codes ever since I became an autodidac home chemist. It's kind of a hobby of mine. However, certain chemicals can only be used with certain types of plastics. I try to use glass or Pyrex when possible. However, these are usually expensive and not to mention fragile.
    As far as plastics go, when I do use them, I try to reuse them as often as I can.
    When alternatives are available, I use them, such as paper instead of plastic shopping bags. Paper instead of plastic straws, etc. These are easily recyclable.
    I often go for wood instead of plastics for some items/purposes, but then there's the polyurethane issue.
    I live in a place that has a humid climate, and without any kind of sealant, it would become warped or disintegrated completely in a short time. I have found beeswax to be a good option in some cases, but it is rather expensive.
    But completely avoiding plastic usage in many circumstances is often difficult, if not an impossible endeavor, to say the least. But at least I try.

  • @KevinGEHaskins
    @KevinGEHaskins 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I work at a company called efs plastic where we recycle all types of plastic. All of the listed types are recycled at least to a point they cannot be done any further

    • @KenJackson_US
      @KenJackson_US 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Profitable? Or subsidized?

  • @stevep5408
    @stevep5408 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    There is a oil refinery in Philly that closed recently. It opened in the 1850s as a whale oil refinery. Oil refineries take a 42 gallon barrel of crude oil and produce 45 gallons of product. Only approximately 30 gallons of that product is motor fuels, gasoline jet fuel and diesel fuel. The rest is chemical feed stocks for things like plastics, home heating oil(diesel), ethylene (ethylene oxide, chip manufacture), engine oil(they used to have their own canning plants) ECT. They are really chemical plants that use crude oil as feed stocks!

  • @FragEightyfive
    @FragEightyfive 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I was watching something about plastic pollution a while back, where the researchers had a dead sea turtle they pulled up on their boat. The sea turtle had died because it's gut had a blockage. They then cut open the turtle to and found plastic bag, pulled the plastic back out, and put it in a fresh new plastic bag.
    The circle of life.

  • @Cyntaria
    @Cyntaria 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    My family still has an ivory piano from the early 1900s. Ivory pianos do not feel any better to play than modern pianos, some digital pianos feel better than older pianos that aren't in great shape. The only reason we have it is because my grandparents bought it cheap secondhand for my mum when she was 8 as it was already 40-50 years old and she still has that piano today.

  • @chris88962
    @chris88962 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    There’s been a huge drop in the push for “Reduce” and “Re-use” in the last few decades. Everyone throws stuff in the blue can and assumes they’re good.

  • @Paul-pj5qu
    @Paul-pj5qu 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I have believed plastic recycling is a scam for a very long time with respect to those codes. If those codes had any real meaning they would be on everything and your local recycling would say we can recycle recycling symbol, one recycling symbol 2. Recycling symbol 3. But not recycling symbol 5. Recycling symbol 6. Recycling symbol 7, or better yet just have a recycling symbol that says not recyclable. Instead, at least where I live, if you want to separate out your recyclables, you practically have to have a degree in plastics and other materials. "You can recycle this unless it's wax coated".