Australian ban on fish-shaped plastic soy sauce dispensers a world first (www.theguardian.com)
from MicroWave@lemmy.world to world@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 10:16
https://lemmy.world/post/35245145

The device known as shoyu-tai (or soy-sauce snapper in Japanese) was invented in 1954 by Teruo Watanabe, the founder of Osaka-based company Asahi Sogyo, according to a report from Japan’s Radio Kansai.

It was then common for glass and ceramic containers to be used but the advent of cheap industrial plastics allowed the creation of a small polyethylene container in the shape of a fish, officially named the “Lunch Charm”.

The invention quickly spread around Japan and eventually worldwide, and it is estimated that billions have been produced.

#world

threaded - newest

emmanuel_car@fedia.io on 31 Aug 10:42 next collapse

Oh no! How are people supposed to sneak G into parties now?

INHALE_VEGETABLES@aussie.zone on 31 Aug 10:55 next collapse

Based

moody@lemmings.world on 31 Aug 12:17 collapse

Contact lens case is how they did it around here.

Eheran@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 11:02 next collapse

What is the issue with this form compared to others?

fan0m@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 11:06 next collapse

The issue is that you didn’t read the article 😊

INHALE_VEGETABLES@aussie.zone on 31 Aug 11:18 collapse

I barely even read this comment

LadyButterfly@reddthat.com on 31 Aug 11:56 collapse

I need the tldr of this entire thread

dependencyinjection@discuss.tchncs.de on 31 Aug 12:22 collapse

TLDR: Stuff happens. People reacted and then went to bed.

phant@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 11:09 next collapse

A decent question. Especially if this ban allows the ripper pouch style single serve sauces.
I have collected a tonne of the fish shaped bad boys at river clean ups, so maybe they’re somehow worse. Tbh takeaway sushi could improve in a lot of ways to reduce single use plastics, so kinda funny that the cute fish copped it.

prex@aussie.zone on 31 Aug 11:44 collapse

If it hasn’t already been broken down into microplastics yet and it’s floating around in its whole form, then other organisms that eat fish that size could think it is a fish and then eat it,” Wootton said.

And:

“Since they are quite a thick plastic, it does take quite a while for them to degrade.”

fartsparkles@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 11:21 collapse

South Australia will be the first place in the world to ban them under a wider ban on single-use plastics that comes into force on 1 September.

JasonDJ@lemmy.zip on 31 Aug 12:13 collapse

They aren’t banning the packets tho… I can see how the plastic pouches could be better for the environment than the polypropylene fish tho, but certainly not by much.

Man, it sounds like the ultimate first-world problem, but how are they gonna get soy sauce with takeout sushi without single-use plastics? I imagine the people who get takeout sushi and the people who have a bottle of soy sauce in their fridge are largely different groups. Not to mention the people who get takeout sushi for lunch at work. This may degrade the takeout sushi experience for all of South Australia.

0tan0d@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 12:31 next collapse

We can make tiny glass bottles if the market demands it.

Kirp123@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 12:43 next collapse

These companies use plastic because of its weight and ease of manufacturing and I assume it’s also cheaper than glass. The weight may seem a weird metric but when they are shipping billion of them every year it adds up.

If they were forced to change to glass they would definitely increase the price to compensate.

tomiant@programming.dev on 31 Aug 16:32 collapse

I would love to save the world from ecological collapse, but not if I have to pay for it in any way shape of form whatsoever!

Eheran@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 13:00 collapse

Glass is only better when it is reused something like 5 times. Otherwise it is worse, as the energy needed to make it is just so high plus all the shipping.

elucubra@sopuli.xyz on 31 Aug 15:35 collapse

True, but at least glass breaks down into sand, and metal caps don’t pollute, they are just unsightly. The plastic cap liners can be made of bioplastics. The energy aspect could be mitigated by mandating 100% renewables in production and transportation, maybe? I know it’s not easy to transition to these, but we don’t have many options.

As I mentioned in a prior comment, there are companies making bioplastic containers, in commercial production now.

Eheran@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 16:23 collapse

Glass is made essentially exclusively with natural gas as the fuel source and there is no easy way to transition to something else to directly use electricity at these scales, conditions and temperatures. Before transitioning such high hanging fruit, we first need to stop burning it to heat homes, which is really easy to replace with electricity.

ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 31 Aug 15:05 next collapse

I imagine the people who get takeout sushi and the people who have a bottle of soy sauce in their fridge are largely different groups.

Tbh there’s your answer, fix that. Buy some damn soy sauce, they sell it at the most basic stores.

But that doesn’t solve the issue for people eating it at a third location, like work, their car, or an unprepared friend’s house, can’t buy bottles of soy for literally everywhere you go “just in case” and such.

Maybe we still need them for that, but we can also be mindful of our circumstances and prepare/choose appropriately. Would require people to change personally however, so keep waiting lol.

Hell maybe we just make it common for them to sell little 4oz resealable glass bottles of kikkoman at the Chinese spot, then one can still be unprepared and still get the sauce there (though it’d be cheaper if they prepare next time), and whatever sauce isn’t used is retainable. Still not perfect since those bottles have plastic tops, but it’s something! Maybe make the caps out of hemp plastic for added bonus?

Duckingold@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 15:13 next collapse

Banning the soy sauce packets would force a mindset change. A new solution would be restaurants having the full size bottles and when you pick up, you can bring a Tupperware to fill.

Rivalarrival@lemmy.today on 31 Aug 15:21 next collapse

Single use foil pouches.

tomiant@programming.dev on 31 Aug 16:30 next collapse

Well, they claim capitalism is the best driver there is for invention, so this should be sorted before Wednesday!

captainlezbian@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 17:42 collapse

If my wife wasn’t soy intolerant I’d have a bottle of soy sauce in my fridge (her issues with soy mean I really only get east Asian food when going out) and if she liked fish I’d get takeout sushi sometimes. Though honestly if she liked fish and could eat soy sauce I’d’ve learned to make sushi by now, so maybe I’m not the default here

Lexam@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 12:19 next collapse

Those are cute and I can see how they would be popular. And I see why they should also be banned. I live in the Midwest and I’m not sure I have seen these. Ours just comes in a little sauce packet.

elucubra@sopuli.xyz on 31 Aug 15:15 next collapse

Essentially a less cute plastic wrapper, no?

captainlezbian@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 17:38 next collapse

Yeah but as another person from the American Midwest, the article seems to indicate south Australia is moving to the packets we have as they’re larger and use less plastic, though the goal is for bulk soy sauce in refillable containers

Hrothgar59@lemmy.world on 01 Sep 01:27 collapse

In Australia we have these or the packets, for take away. You don’t use them for dine in, we have larger refillable glass/plastic containers for that.

catsarebadpeople@sh.itjust.works on 31 Aug 21:19 collapse

Kind of but it’s still a fraction of the waste created. Not perfect but I’d say the polyethylene ones take up 5 to 10 times more space in a landfill or ocean.

HeyThisIsntTheYMCA@lemmy.world on 01 Sep 01:27 collapse

yeah, i’m thinking about our taco bell sauce packets. would they put them in little soy sauce bottles at every table? little cholula bottles with the cute wooden stoppers? what would they do if they couldn’t bribe lobby their way out of this?

Steve@startrek.website on 31 Aug 13:51 next collapse

I have an idea, just stop putting them in the ocean.

elucubra@sopuli.xyz on 31 Aug 15:29 next collapse

I love productive comments.

Gold_E_Lox@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 31 Aug 16:31 next collapse

oh fuck, i wasnt supposed to save all my plastic containers until my next day at the beach???

HeyThisIsntTheYMCA@lemmy.world on 01 Sep 01:28 collapse

some jerk: i havE aN idEa, NO

bilb@lemmy.ml on 31 Aug 14:23 next collapse

I have never once seen one of these. Interesting.

k0e3@lemmy.ca on 31 Aug 15:14 next collapse

I’ve been in Japan for 15 years but Idon’t think I’ve seen these here in a long while. Maybe it’s a regional thing?

6nk06@sh.itjust.works on 01 Sep 03:22 collapse

It’s sold in every sushi box in France. I guess it’s a way to pretend it’s a Japanese thing.

k0e3@lemmy.ca on 01 Sep 06:06 collapse

Interesting! I know we used to have them in Japan, but they must have phased them out over time because I didn’t notice they were gone until I saw this article lol. I mostly see clear packets that you tear, similar to ketchup packets.

elucubra@sopuli.xyz on 31 Aug 15:27 next collapse

A Spanish company (I imagine there are a few worldwide) develops compostable bioplastic containers using PLA, polylactic acid, the most used plastic in 3D printing, in food safe formulations. I suppose there are limitations on what it can contain, and I don’t know if soy sauce is compatible. I know that it’s used for single serving olive oil, for example. There are challenges, like storage life, but it’s a good start.

I do a lot of 3D printing. Printing PLA things for food storage is not recommended, not because of PLA, but because filaments often have modifiers to enhance certain properties that may not be food safe, and because contact with materials and parts, like extrusion nozzles may add impurities that are probably not food safe…

MrQuallzin@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 15:32 next collapse

The hard part about PLA is that while it is biodegradable, it’s only in certain conditions/facilities who are set up for it, and it’s not very common around the country. I’m all for what the company is doing, and I already do see a lot of PLA products in fast food (like soda cups), but it doesn’t mean much if we don’t have the facilities to properly dispose of it.

Source: I do a modest amount of 3D printing

elucubra@sopuli.xyz on 31 Aug 16:02 collapse

I’m definitely not a polymer expert, I also have my information from what I read as a hobbyist. My take is that while PLA will compost in commercial facilities, it will eventually biodegrade in a reasonable time frame, with minor impact to nature. Better than the alternatives, I guess.

Pyr_Pressure@lemmy.ca on 31 Aug 16:12 collapse

How does it biodegrade though?

Just like disintegrate into tiny plastic molecules that we can no longer see but it’s still plastic? Or does it degrade as far as becoming the individual components that made up the plastic and can be recycled and used by things in nature?

Cort@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 16:37 next collapse

Pla is poly lactic acid, so it breaks down into lactic acid and then further into water and CO2 with heat and bacteria exposure.

elucubra@sopuli.xyz on 01 Sep 08:12 next collapse

I don’t know. As I mentioned elsewhere I’m not a chemical engineer, but I imagine that being made from starches, it may be decomposed into digestible compounds. Just guessing here.

elucubra@sopuli.xyz on 02 Sep 08:46 collapse

If it breaks down into tiny pieces its not biodegradable. The definition of biodegradable is that its chemically “processed by nature”.

BTW, biodegradable does not necessarily mean innocuous. A lot of “natural” elements and compounds are toxic. Something may be biodegraded, and leave mercury as one of the resulting elements, for example.

dlatch@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 15:33 next collapse

Unfortunately while PLA is technically biodegradable, it requires very specific conditions that can only be achieved in dedicated facilities. So it’s not like you can throw it in the composting bin and be done with it. It will also survive for a long time in nature.

elucubra@sopuli.xyz on 31 Aug 15:57 collapse

Sure, but PLA will eventually biodegrade, unlike things like polypropilene or polyethylene, which are incredibly useful precisely because of their imperviousness.

EDIT: I’m willing to bet that PLA IS biodegradable in home settings if the correct method is used, like the Berkeley method, which produces much higher heat than “heap” methods. The Berkley method can produce compost in under a month, via endothermic processes that generate relatively high heat. All you need at home are the compostable materials, and a roughly 1m cube, which can be made out of pallets, for example.

bitwolf@sh.itjust.works on 31 Aug 15:44 next collapse

Keep in mind that PLA also leaks microplastics into food and could also be considered a risk to health just like other plastics.

elucubra@sopuli.xyz on 31 Aug 15:55 collapse

Aren’t these biodegradable, though? I imagine the body would eventually process them, unlike hydrocarbon based plastics.

Catoblepas@piefed.blahaj.zone on 31 Aug 16:29 collapse

“Biodegradable” doesn’t mean “biodegradable in the conditions in the human body.” Lots of ‘green’ plastics are only compostable at a fairly high temperature (120F/50C) and with specific bacteria present.

whiwake@lemmy.cafe on 31 Aug 17:37 next collapse

Biodegradable needs a new definition

twack@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 21:41 collapse

I’ve started to see home compostable on some packages.

Cornelius_Wangenheim@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 19:01 collapse

PLA is not one of those. It’s used in biodegradable implants. Even fairly large bone screws will dissolve within a couple years.

pupbiru@aussie.zone on 01 Sep 04:16 next collapse

PLA is pretty brittle AFAIK. these need to be squeezed, so i’m not sure it’d do… perhaps they could add something to it? but whether that additive would also be compostable… it’d certainly make it non-recyclable

elucubra@sopuli.xyz on 01 Sep 07:58 collapse

I used to buy the olive oil containers for a restaurant I owned. They worked quite well. Small single serving cups with a peel off lid. I don’t know if the lids were bioplastic, though.

arc99@lemmy.world on 01 Sep 09:24 next collapse

Some people just don’t appreciate the irony of killing turtles with fish-shaped plastic, what can you do

PLA isn’t food safe in 3d printing mostly because of layers on a print trap foreign material / bacteria and water can also seep into microscopic gaps into infill and it becomes a breeding ground. I doubt it would be useful for anything squeezy but it might be useful for single use forks and other utensils. But paper / wood can do those things already so I don’t see PLA being much use. For sachets I expect the answer is paper with some kind of biodegradable lining which gives a product a shelf life of a few years but does degrade in time.

Also, some “biodegradable” products are only compostable in specialist facilities where it can be shredded and broken down with water / heat / pressure. I think PLA is a bit like that. If you print something out of PLA and stick it out in the garden or even toss it into a compost bin it’ll still be there in 10 years although it might be faded, warped & brittle. Maybe it eventually biodegrades but it’s not quick enough.

elucubra@sopuli.xyz on 02 Sep 08:27 collapse

The caveats you express are somewhat valid, but not totally correct. Printing correctly, with a food safe nozzle, path, and PLA formulation, is entirely possible. Simply printing in single layers, with a properly dialed in printer can eliminate your concerns. Medical items and implants are printed out of PLA, albeit with extreme production controls.

However, printing these single use items would be absolutely un-economical. 3D printing shines in short runs, bespoke items, like replacement part that are out of production, or which are very difficult to manufacture by other methods like injection or machining.

Its true that PLA, in unmodified form, has a much higher modulus than PP or PE, so squishiness is out of the question. What I have mentioned before is that I have bought single serve olive oil in PLA containers. From what I could see, these were injection molded and had a film top made from a plastic I never bothered to identify.

These containers were surprisingly elastic when crushed, not as elastic as other plastics, like PET, PP or PE, but much more than I had come to expect from my experience with the material. I’m going to attribute this to molding vs. extruding.

gandalf_der_12te@discuss.tchncs.de on 02 Sep 07:31 collapse

The thing is that mass-produced plastic items (like the plastic fish in question) are typically not produced with 3D-printing, because that would be incredibly slow and inefficient.

Instead, basically some kind of oil or molten mass is pressed into a form and then cooled down/condensed into a solid object. This way you can rapidly produce thousands of plastic items per minute. There is no nozzle involved, and you can do with fewer additives because the mechanical press removes the need for the filament to be so fickly 3D-printable. It can basically do with a bit more crude types of plastics, so you need a bit less additives to make the plastics more mendable.

elucubra@sopuli.xyz on 02 Sep 08:03 collapse

I never said that these should be produced via 3D printing, it would be both economically unfeasible, and very difficult to achieve food safety, as I have mentioned.

The process you are describing is injection molding, generally used for solid parts. In this case, a variation called blown injection molding, is used. In this case the material is injected into a mold, and then a gas is blown into the interior, to make the material stick to the inner mold, and create a cavity. Nozzles are involved, as they are used to inject the material into the mold. These nozzles can be made specifically to be food safe, with stainless steel, for example.

ParadoxSeahorse@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 18:30 next collapse

Some people just don’t appreciate the irony of killing turtles with fish-shaped plastic, what can you do

Sir_Simon_Spamalot@lemmy.world on 01 Sep 06:49 collapse

You know what’s killing more turtles? Irresponsible mega-corporations.

plyth@feddit.org on 01 Sep 07:13 collapse

Nothing is ever produced by them that isn’t bought by someone who should have said no.

If companies are to blame then that’s the media companies who don’t inform the consumers about their responsibilities but instead sell ads for harmful products.

turtlesareneat@discuss.online on 01 Sep 13:01 next collapse

No, you can’t blame consumers for corporations bad behavior, consumers act in their own self interest, not a collective self interest. This is precisely why we have regulations.

plyth@feddit.org on 01 Sep 14:45 collapse

I blame the humans who keep being consumers.

hark@lemmy.world on 01 Sep 17:39 next collapse

Good luck relying on informed customers when customers are too busy living their lives to keep track of a billion different reasons for why they shouldn’t buy one product over another. Also, these are given out at restaurants. Do you recommend refusing to go to a restaurant if they happen to see this dispenser being included there?

How is making sure millions of people are informed and making the “correct” decision every time a better solution than simply restricting on the supply side?

plyth@feddit.org on 01 Sep 18:06 collapse

It’s the only way to make a change. Businesses can buy politicians to avoid regulations.

hark@lemmy.world on 02 Sep 03:58 collapse

It’d cost more to buy out the politicians than to switch to the sachets that are still allowed. The sachets are cheaper to produce since they use less plastic and businesses would be happy to be “forced” to switch to a cheaper alternative along with all their competitors.

plyth@feddit.org on 02 Sep 14:31 collapse

In this case. Most of the times the politician is cheaper.

GenosseFlosse@feddit.org on 02 Sep 06:59 collapse

If corporations would not give people the choice of buying one way plastic containers, then no one would buy them.

plyth@feddit.org on 02 Sep 14:29 collapse

True. Now do we want people to take responsibility for their society or do we want them to get used to rely on somebody else?

HotDayBreeze@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 20:52 next collapse

Scrolling by I literally thought “Man, that candy looks delicious, what’s this article about?” And then read the headline… 🫠

x00z@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 21:11 next collapse

Al Gore is going to have a field day with this.

NigelFrobisher@aussie.zone on 01 Sep 02:30 next collapse

I’ve got a fridge drawer for these.

HurricaneLiz@lemmy.world on 01 Sep 12:29 collapse

I never knew these existed and now I kindof want one. Lol maybe I’ll see one in an antique store in 40 years

yourgodlucifer@sh.itjust.works on 01 Sep 03:04 next collapse

Wonder if you could put soy sauce in wax like those wax bottle candies instead

VitoRobles@lemmy.today on 01 Sep 17:55 collapse

If it exists, I can’t wait to hand these out during Halloween

Sunsofold@lemmings.world on 01 Sep 05:27 next collapse

I was thinking about these literally just yesterday. I’m wondering if they could be essentially replaced with something like those wax bottle candies. Maybe not the best for places that reach extreme temperatures but some places could do it without issue.

Treczoks@lemmy.world on 01 Sep 05:42 next collapse

The “fish-shaped” is rather irrelevant. The point is that it is a single -use plastic thing. With very little content in relation to the plastic used.

Lumisal@lemmy.world on 01 Sep 09:47 collapse

I thought it would have been very relevant.

It looks like a fish lure.

If this is floating around at sea I don’t see why other fish (and maybe certain sea birds?) wouldn’t think it’s prey, and it even has a bright red indicator that makes it easy to spot.

Treczoks@lemmy.world on 01 Sep 11:58 collapse

Only relevant for countries that still “recycle” plastics by throwing them into the sea.

ammonium@lemmy.world on 01 Sep 12:40 next collapse

Some thrash will end up in nature no matter what you do, especially small and light items. That’s why it’s good practice to design packaging do that it does minimal harm if it ends up in nature.

njm1314@lemmy.world on 01 Sep 17:59 collapse

So all of them.

Treczoks@lemmy.world on 02 Sep 05:53 collapse

All of them participate, yes, but on vastly different levels. There are countries that actually collect and recycle.

njm1314@lemmy.world on 02 Sep 06:38 next collapse

You misunderstand. I’m saying those countries that think they’re doing a good job, their shit’s going straight to the water too. They’re all fooling themselves. Or more accurately they’re fooling you the consumer and thosr believing recycling works. It doesn’t for the vast vast majority of plastics. So all of them are dumping Plastics in the water.

The_Decryptor@aussie.zone on 02 Sep 10:08 collapse

There are countries that actually collect and recycle.

And we do that in Australia, we just don’t have the capacity to process all the waste (Between 85%-90% of plastic waste goes to landfill instead), and even then the recyclability of plastic is vastly overstated.

It’s a much better idea to just prevent the plastic waste being produced in the first place.

Treczoks@lemmy.world on 02 Sep 12:23 collapse

We don’t do landfills for what? 20 Years? Something like that.

pyre@lemmy.world on 01 Sep 08:55 next collapse

is this like for food delivery?

arc99@lemmy.world on 01 Sep 09:15 next collapse

I’ve never seen these things before but it does seem like a waste of plastic. Even sachets of sauce shouldn’t be handed out in most circumstances, at least for dine-in food in fast food places - use dispensers and paper cups. I wonder if there is a biodegradable sachet material which has a couple of years shelf life but degrades thereafter.

renrenPDX@lemmy.world on 01 Sep 12:14 next collapse

I’m not defending the use but should mention that these are convenient over traditional sauce packets. They allow precise application in a droplet form, don’t spill everywhere, and can be closed with the included cap.

Chais@sh.itjust.works on 01 Sep 13:25 collapse

But offer no benefit over a simple serving bottle.

renrenPDX@lemmy.world on 01 Sep 15:07 next collapse

Correct. These are often found in takeaway containers.

zipzoopaboop@lemmynsfw.com on 01 Sep 17:27 collapse

Portability and cost.

I don’t support single use plastics but saying no benefit is just willfully ignorant and causes alternatives to fail for missing the point.

Chais@sh.itjust.works on 01 Sep 17:44 next collapse

Portability is a fair point, but I feel like we shouldn’t count cost, since that’s the line of thinking that got us into this mess.

zipzoopaboop@lemmynsfw.com on 01 Sep 18:03 collapse

Unfortunate reality while we still have capitalism. Plastic bags are banned where I am but they still show up regularly

Wahots@pawb.social on 01 Sep 17:53 next collapse

It could just be waxed paper/waxed cardboard like the milk cartons of yore, but small. A lot of this stuff has been around long before plastics, and we got by just fine :)

Zink@programming.dev on 01 Sep 18:10 collapse

saying no benefit is just willfully ignorant and causes alternatives to fail

It also plays into the conservative point of view that everybody who gives a shit about the biosphere is just as ignorant as they are, and that the reasons for taking away their plastic straws and grocery bags have to do with evil communist america-destruction rather than preventing things like micro plastics in the organs of developing fetuses and global climate change.

Ignorance and pretending a problem doesn’t exist is like step 0 of most conservative policies.

Meron35@lemmy.world on 02 Sep 04:08 next collapse

Date rapists in shambles

For context, these containers are really popular for storing drugs like GHB

gandalf_der_12te@discuss.tchncs.de on 02 Sep 07:27 collapse

I’m gonna say it:

The problem is not the fish-shaped plastic per se, but the fact that so much of it ends up in the ocean: Why do we still not collect and burn plastics properly? People throw their waste everywhere because there’s not enough waste bins in comfortable walking distance. In Vienna, where waste bins are frequent on the streets (you basically never have to walk more than 30 meters to one, no matter where you sit and pause, somehow), there is literally no litter in the environment. No plastic articles or metal cans on the streets. Very rare cigarettes laying around. That’s because Vienna has enough trash cans. Many cities don’t have that and people have literally no choice to dispose of their trash properly because there’s simply no trash cans around, so you either carry your dirty plastic packaging in your backpack and therefore sully your backpack with the grease on the packaging, or throw it into the environment.

Then, there needs to be strict laws that say that all plastic waste has to be burned, not dumped into the environment.

Then, biodegradable bioplastics would also mitigate this problem a lot.

corodius@lemmy.world on 02 Sep 08:52 next collapse

Burning plastic does not mitigate its environmental effects, and infact would increase air pollution and microplastics exponentially if we were to start.

I fully agree with the rest, but burning plastic is definitely not the answer.

Mpatch@lemmy.world on 02 Sep 10:56 next collapse

So, did you just come up with that, or do you actually know something about industrial incinerators used for power generation?

gandalf_der_12te@discuss.tchncs.de on 02 Sep 13:37 collapse

i too would like any kind of reasonable source about this, because i’ve heard very different from a many colleagues who work in this field.

modern incineration sites are very clean and produce no significant air polluting output. at least in modern sites. microplastics is also not an issue with these. the problem is that the trash gets thrown in rivers and forests where it breaks into microplastics, but that isn’t an issue if it’s all collected and incinerated.

Zozano@aussie.zone on 02 Sep 10:20 next collapse

Ironically, Japan has almost no trash bins. You’ll find them next to vending machines - you’re expected to consume there and throw away packaging immediately, or take the rubbish with you.

So pick a lane. 100 bins per square kilometer, or none.

Anywhere in between evidently sucks.

cley_faye@lemmy.world on 02 Sep 10:52 next collapse

People throw their waste everywhere because there’s not enough waste bins in comfortable walking distance

I see almost daily people throwing trash on the street in front of an empty recycle bin. I think the issue is more about people not giving a shit than convenience of finding a trashcan or keeping stuff in your pocket until you do.

adavis@lemmy.world on 02 Sep 11:39 next collapse

In addition, too many people don’t even care enough to use the correct bin. Every bin day my neighbours bins are overflowing with no recyclables in their recycling bin. I wouldn’t be surprised if the bins were meaningless and it all went in a hole in the ground

gandalf_der_12te@discuss.tchncs.de on 02 Sep 13:34 collapse

it practically does all go to the same incineration site. the recycle bins are mostly to make you believe otherwise, for political reasons, sothat you look at plastic in general more favorable. but practically none of it gets recycled.

gandalf_der_12te@discuss.tchncs.de on 02 Sep 13:39 collapse
humanoidchaos@lemmy.cif.su on 02 Sep 13:40 collapse

I don’t think you even begin to understand what it’s like to have billions of people on the earth.

No matter what we do, people will still slip through the cracks and this litter will get out.