NZ Government “must move fast” to ban killer microbeads – Greenpeace

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Environment Minister Nick Smith is set to hold a meeting to discuss options for banning noxious microbeads from personal care products in New Zealand.

Greenpeace NZ says the Government must urgently follow the example of other countries like Canada, the USA and the Netherlands, and put a blanket ban on microbeads, a type of microplastic that can be found in products such as toothpastes, face washes, scrubs and shower gels.

Greenpeace campaigner, Sarah Yates, says the harmful effects of the tiny plastic particles that are added to consumer goods for their exfoliating and aesthetic properties are well known, and Nick Smith’s meeting with the Ministry for the Environment must get the ball rolling on banning them.

“Evidence is mounting by the day that they’re bad news. Billions of microbeads are making their way through our sewerage systems and getting flushed out into our oceans, where they’re being eaten by marine animals,” she says.

“They end up in the stomachs of aquatic life at all stages of the food chain, from plankton through to fish, dolphins and whales. Microbeads cause serious and painful health problems for these animals.

“The latest studies are showing that some juvenile fish actually prefer to eat microbeads over their natural food source, which is leading to severe behavioural changes that threaten their survival.”

Most wastewater treatment technology is not capable of filtering out all microplastics, including microbeads, because they are too small, Yates says. Once they’re released into the marine environment, it is impossible to clean them up and they persist in the environment for hundreds of years.

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And although companies in New Zealand, including some supermarkets, are increasingly voluntarily getting rid of products with microbeads from their supply chain, Yates says now it’s time for the Government to step up too.

“A voluntary-level agreement just isn’t sufficient and has been proven not to work internationally. Eliminating microplastic pollution at the source is the only way forward.

“As our Environment Minister, Nick Smith must move fast to enforce a national legislative ban where products containing microbeads are manufactured, used or sold.”

1 COMMENT

  1. Full support here as these chemicals are killing and maiming people in insidious ways with impunity.

    Chemical Companies while seeming to be environmentally friendly while they keep sending these toxic endocrine disrupting chemicals intro the environment killing every living cell and store their toxins in our bodies until we die prematurely so we need to force government action on all chemicals not only microbeads.

    But also we also stop toxic 1,3 butadiene styrene tyre dust from road runoff into our drains streams rivers and into our oceans and then also entering our bodies as we drive or live by any busy road!!!!!!!!!

    As 9kgs tyre dust sediment per day collect per km on any road carrying around 20,000 cars around a busy road!!!

    http://www.abc.net.au/science/articles/2012/07/31/3554997.htm

    If any trucks are on those roads one truck with 28-32 tyres produce 100 times more then a car so we need to put truck freight back on rail as Julie Ann Genter correctly say’s we need to do.

    http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/politics/80317784/Green-Party-transport-policy-Get-rid-of-trucks-move-freight-to-rail-and-sea

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