Mary Catherine O'Connor - The lonely fight against the biggest environmental problem you've never heard of
Ecologist Mark Browne knew he’d found something big when,
after months of tediously examining sediment along shorelines around the world,
he noticed something no one had predicted: fibers. Everywhere. They were tiny
and synthetic and he was finding them in the greatest concentration near sewage
outflows. In other words, they were coming from us. In fact, 85% of the human-made material found on the
shoreline were microfibers, and matched the types of material, such as nylon
and acrylic, used in clothing.
It is not news that microplastic – which the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration defines as plastic fragments 5mm or
smaller – is ubiquitous in all five major ocean gyres. And
numerous studies have shown that small organisms readily ingest microplastics,
introducing toxic pollutants to the food chain.
But Browne’s 2011 paper
announcing his findings marked a milestone, according to Abigail
Barrows, an independent marine research scientist based in Stonington, Maine,
who has helped to check for plastic in more than 150 one-liter water samples
collected around the world. “He’s fantastic – very well respected” among marine
science researchers, says Barrows. “He is a pioneer in microplastics research.”
By sampling wastewater from domestic washing machines,
Browne estimated that around 1,900 individual fibers can be rinsed off a single
synthetic garment - ending up in our oceans. Alarmed by his findings, Browne reached out to prominent
clothing brands for help. He sought partnerships to try to determine the flow
of synthetic fibers from clothing to the washing machine to the ocean. He also
hoped his research might help develop better textile design to prevent the
migration of toxic fibers into water systems.
The reaction wasn’t what he expected. He contacted leaders in the outdoor apparel industry - big
purveyors of synthetic fabrics - including Patagonia, Nike and Polartec. But
none of these companies agreed to lend support. “Perhaps it’s my pitch,” Browne joked. “We want to look for
new, more durable materials that do not emit so much microplastic.”
In 2013, Brown presented his vision for a program called
Benign by Design, backed by a team of engineers and scientists from academic
institutions around the world as well as from the Environmental Protection
Agency. The group’s goal is to help the industry tackle the problem of
synthetic microfiber migration into waterways and marine ecosystems. He
proposed creating a range of working groups where scientists and industry
representatives would work together to develop synthetic materials that do not
shed synthetic fibers – or do so minimally but are still cost-effective,
high-performing and, if possible, rely on recycled materials.
Only one firm, women’s clothing brand Eileen Fisher, offered
to support him. The company’s $10,000 grant has supported a section of Browne’s
research over the past year. “Any lifecycle issue, especially when it’s about a huge
consumer product like clothing, is important,” says Shona Quinn, sustainability
leader with Eileen Fisher. “[Browne] is raising an issue no one else has been studying.”
While Browne sees the grant as a validation of his efforts,
90% of the products Eileen Fisher sells are made of natural fibers. He’s still
hoping to find a clothing company that will collaborate on research and
development of new synthetic fabrics that will not shed microfibers. While pitching his idea at the Launch innovation conference,
Browne spoke to Jim Zieba, vice president of Polartec’s advanced concepts and
business development group. In a follow-up email, Browne asked if Zeiba could
provide him with polymers from Polartec textiles so that Browne could grow the
database of materials he maintains to help discern the unidentified fibers in
his samples. He did not hear back from Zeiba.
Allon Cohne, global marketing director at Polartec, says
he’s familiar with Browne and his research, but that Polartec has already done
an internal study to analyze the effluent at its Lawrence, Massachusetts,
manufacturing plant. Aside from characterizing the amount of microfibers
contained in the effluent as “minimal”, Cohne said he could not publicly share
the study or any details – such as what minimal means.
Browne says he’s glad to hear that Polartec conducted a
study, but maintains that any truly scientific study would be open to peer
review. (As it happens, the words “Committed to Science” are currently
presented on Polartec’s website, above
a video describing Polatec’s approach to fabric innovation.)
Patagonia, a company known for its strong environmental
ethic and sustainable manufacturing processes, has also declined to work with
Browne. The company’s strategic environmental responsibility manager, Todd
Copeland, says the company considers Browne’s findings too preliminary to
commit resources directly to a project like Benign by Design, until it sees
more solid evidence that specific types of products or materials, such as
fleece jackets or polyester base layers, are contributing to a major
environmental threat. “I don’t know how much effort we want to spend looking
for the solution before we know where the problem is,” Copeland says.
Browne says that, without industry support, he doesn’t know
how he can move ahead with his efforts to address microfiber migration from
textiles at their source. “I think [clothing companies] have all put a lot of
marketing money into environmental programs, but I’ve not seen evidence that
they’ve put much money into research,” says Browne. In fact, Patagonia maintains a policy to not directly
support research, its spokesman Adam Fetcher told me. Instead, it supports
non-profit groups doing environmental advocacy work.
Over the past five years,
Patagonia has awarded close to $70,000 in grants to groups focused on the
microplastics pollution issue. These include Algalita Marine Research
Foundation (founded by captain Charles Moore, who first raised the issue of
microplastics in oceans), 5 Gyres, and Adventurers and Scientists for
Conservation (ASC), with whom Abigail Barrows works to collect surface water
samples from around the world for her research into microfibers.
Perhaps Browne would have more luck if he were an
environmental advocate rather than a scientist. Still, Gregg Treinish, ASC executive director, says he would
need to raise a great deal more money to fund the level of research he feels
microfibers deserve. “Determining what type of plastic is in the water is hard
and expensive – up to $1000 per sample.”
Bad chemistry
Browne’s difficulty in finding companies to cooperate might
be compounded by the fact that the industry that is already under scrutiny for
different environmental issues. According
to the World Bank, textile manufacturing generates up to 20% of industrial
wastewater in China, and a number of environmental groups, chiefly Greenpeace,
have launched campaigns to pressure clothing makers to rid their supply chains
of toxic chemicals, such as perfluorinated chemicals (PFCs) used in textile
processing. PFCs are linked to environmental toxicity and human health
problems, and Kevin Brigden, a chemist and Greenpeace honorary research fellow,
says some manufacturers are finally beginning to phase them out.
But Brigden fears microfibers released from synthetic fibers
could just as chemically hazardous. “Some chemicals are very water soluble, so
they wash out [into wastewater during textile manufacturing],” Brigden says.
“Others are less soluble so they take time to wash off. If fabrics break down
then [microfibers] are another pathway for those [chemicals into the environment].”
Those fighting the use of microbeads in beauty products are
finding more traction, Barrows says, because phasing them out is
straightforward. Getting rid of synthetic fibers, on the other hand, would be
extremely difficult. Not only are synthetic fabrics durable and versatile, but
they can have smaller water and energy footprint than natural fabrics.
“Synthetic fabrics have many great applications,” Barrows concedes, and
determining how to measure their environmental impacts is an overwhelming
challenge.
Other sources, other solutions
Polartec’s Cohne argues that too much emphasis is being
placed on the clothing industry and that carpet and upholstery manufactures
ought to be considered as equally important sources of synthetic microfiber
runoff in the industrial sector. Professional carpet cleaners might be another
vector.
Cohne also believes more onus should be put on washing
machine manufacturers to find ways to capture the clothing fibers so that they
do not ultimately enter wastewater treatment systems. Browne has reached out to appliance manufacturers Siemens,
Dyson (which sells washing machines in Europe), and LG, hoping to engage their
design or research teams in a discussion about how they might be able to
develop microfiber filters to prevent them from entering the water.
None has responded.
However, a Canadian tinkerer turned entrepreneur named Blair
Jollimore is working on a solution. After his septic tank backed up and flooded
his home, he discovered the main culprit was lint from his washing machine. So
the former airplane engine mechanic, based in Nova Scotia, created a filter for
his home laundry machine. “I’m a mechanical engineer, so I modified a water
filter and added stainless steel screen,” says Jollimore. “I’ve been using it for
14 years.”
In 2003, some of his neighbors who were also having septic
tank problems asked if he could make filters for their machines, too, and a
home business was born. Jollimore has sold more than 1,000 of his filters to
homeowners from England to Hawaii and now, with Browne’s encouragement, is
preparing to pitch his filter to appliance makers as a way to rid wastewater of
microfibers.
While he has found a screen that would capture strands down
to 1 micron – necessary to stop all microfibers – he is still experimenting
with what forcing water through such a fine filter could do to laundry machine
function. “Every bit of dirt in your laundry would be captured, so it would
back up the process,” he says.
As for capturing the fibers at their next stop, wastewater
treatment plants, Browne is not optimistic. He says he has conferred with many
engineers who work in sewage treatment and none of them thinks removing fibers
– or microbeads, which enter wastewater through residential plumbing – is
viable. Besides, he says, even if those microplastics were removed from the
liquid waste, they would end up in sludge, which in some places ends up being
turned into fertilizers. In those cases, the plastics would still enter the
ecosystem, and conceivably the food chain.
Browne concedes that more research is required to better
understand the sources and impacts of synthetic microfibers in the environment,
and he wishes he could get the clothing companies on his side. “The [textile]
people I’ve talked to have not been trained environmental scientists, they’re
more often marketing people.” “Industry is saying, ‘you just have to do more work on it’.
But that will require someone to support it,” he says. “It seems to be a way of
avoiding dealing with the problem.”
http://www.theguardian.com/sustainable-business/2014/oct/27/toxic-plastic-synthetic-microscopic-oceans-microbeads-microfibers-food-
We could end up with 'as much plastic in our oceans as fish'
There are currently estimated to be around 800m tonnes of fish in the oceans and 100m to 150m tonnes of plastic. This is increasing by around 20m tonnes a year, but that growth is expected to accelerate as far greater numbers of people are able to afford to buy products that are made with, or packaged in, plastic.
We could end up with 'as much plastic in our oceans as fish'
There are currently estimated to be around 800m tonnes of fish in the oceans and 100m to 150m tonnes of plastic. This is increasing by around 20m tonnes a year, but that growth is expected to accelerate as far greater numbers of people are able to afford to buy products that are made with, or packaged in, plastic.