Plastic habits – an overview for the collection ‘Plastics and Sustainable Earth’

Abstract Over the last 60 years we have modified our behavior to make use of new synthetic material produced from fossil fuels. We have incorporated it into almost every facet of our lives making us more comfortable. The production of plastic material has grown at an alarming rate and huge volumes o...

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Main Author: Harriet Paterson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-12-01
Series:Sustainable Earth
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s42055-019-0017-6
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spelling doaj-08854b44d5774bee93b03c6d53c517372020-12-20T12:37:58ZengBMCSustainable Earth2520-87482019-12-01211810.1186/s42055-019-0017-6Plastic habits – an overview for the collection ‘Plastics and Sustainable Earth’Harriet Paterson0Oceans Institute and School of Agriculture and the Environment, University of Western AustraliaAbstract Over the last 60 years we have modified our behavior to make use of new synthetic material produced from fossil fuels. We have incorporated it into almost every facet of our lives making us more comfortable. The production of plastic material has grown at an alarming rate and huge volumes of non-biodegradable waste now litters the surface of the planet creating a major global problem. To reverse this problem, we need to consider both obvious and novel behavior change and product development. While we are beginning to remove plastic items from the environment, we do have the responsibility to reduce the amount of new plastic material entering the waste stream. In order to achieve this, it is necessary to explore all options relating to the way we design, produce and consume products and determine what acceptable waste is. This article collection is concerned with addressing the problem by exploring a variety of topics as diverse as the history of plastic material use, behavior change, and the development of new, environmentally friendly products and their impact on the environment. The following essay outlines a few ideas that do require further scientific exploration so we can begin the process of weaning society off its current dependence on plastic products.https://doi.org/10.1186/s42055-019-0017-6PlasticSyntheticConsumptionBehavior modificationHabits
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Harriet Paterson
spellingShingle Harriet Paterson
Plastic habits – an overview for the collection ‘Plastics and Sustainable Earth’
Sustainable Earth
Plastic
Synthetic
Consumption
Behavior modification
Habits
author_facet Harriet Paterson
author_sort Harriet Paterson
title Plastic habits – an overview for the collection ‘Plastics and Sustainable Earth’
title_short Plastic habits – an overview for the collection ‘Plastics and Sustainable Earth’
title_full Plastic habits – an overview for the collection ‘Plastics and Sustainable Earth’
title_fullStr Plastic habits – an overview for the collection ‘Plastics and Sustainable Earth’
title_full_unstemmed Plastic habits – an overview for the collection ‘Plastics and Sustainable Earth’
title_sort plastic habits – an overview for the collection ‘plastics and sustainable earth’
publisher BMC
series Sustainable Earth
issn 2520-8748
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Abstract Over the last 60 years we have modified our behavior to make use of new synthetic material produced from fossil fuels. We have incorporated it into almost every facet of our lives making us more comfortable. The production of plastic material has grown at an alarming rate and huge volumes of non-biodegradable waste now litters the surface of the planet creating a major global problem. To reverse this problem, we need to consider both obvious and novel behavior change and product development. While we are beginning to remove plastic items from the environment, we do have the responsibility to reduce the amount of new plastic material entering the waste stream. In order to achieve this, it is necessary to explore all options relating to the way we design, produce and consume products and determine what acceptable waste is. This article collection is concerned with addressing the problem by exploring a variety of topics as diverse as the history of plastic material use, behavior change, and the development of new, environmentally friendly products and their impact on the environment. The following essay outlines a few ideas that do require further scientific exploration so we can begin the process of weaning society off its current dependence on plastic products.
topic Plastic
Synthetic
Consumption
Behavior modification
Habits
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s42055-019-0017-6
work_keys_str_mv AT harrietpaterson plastichabitsanoverviewforthecollectionplasticsandsustainableearth
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