Yes I'm sure. Has anyone else seen this happening as I would be amazed if not. Cannot speak of Dunne's or Tesco.Are you sure it is plastic and not the milk that has gone hard near the cap?
Ah saving a few bob at the expense of your health. Believe me unless you take particular care you or a member of your family is eating plastic unknowingly.I've noticed this. but there is an advantage to retaining the caps on containers that don't go in the Return machines and must go in the recycle bin.
Flatten the container to expel the air, don't distort the "spout' part, screw the cap back on and, bingo, the container now only occupies a quarter to a third of its original volume in the bin, which may save you the cost a lift or three during the year. Juice cartons and milk cartons respond well to this treatment too.
How?Ah saving a few bob at the expense of your health.
Micro-plastics are already in our food-chain, just as Teflon is in every part of our environment. Nothing I've proposed worsens either of those modes of poisoning we've inflicted on ourselves.Believe me unless you take particular care you or a member of your family is eating plastic unknowingly.
How?
Micro-plastics are already in our food-chain, just as Teflon is in every part of our environment. Nothing I've proposed worsens either of those modes of poisoning we've inflicted
It is a Greens initiative. After 10 years we will be be eligible for the recycle bin.
Only if you believe the external environment has no impact on our health, which is of course not true.Sorry I meant we're saving the environment in this case at the expense of our health in the long run with these ridiculous plastic particles falling off caps.
This particular issue is not about micro plastics.Avoiding micro plastics might be a reasonable choice until negative health consequences can be proven and quantified, but forget changing your milk container choice, commercially produced milk is one of the common foodstuffs that score highest in micro plastic content. You'd also need to avoid seafood, fruit, vegetables, rice, salt, honey, bottled water, and sugar, etc.. Hey, a single teabag can release billions of microplastics into your drink!
Pieces large enough to see are likely to pose significantly less risk as they are too large to pass into the blood stream, and from there through the blood barrier into your organs.
Are you sure? The OP mentioned small fragments so I assumed they were talking millimetre scale.This particular issue is not about micro plastics.
Are we still talking micro-plastics or larger pieces? Research into the effects of microplastics is still in the relatively early stages. If you are talking about larger pieces and the risk of perforation of the digestive tract or stomach, then rest assured that is pretty much impossible for a piece of plastic that might fall of a milk container lid while still leaving a functional lid in place. My wife deals with such cases in a busy Dublin hospital, they don't deal with many cases but when they do it's items of the scale of pen lids & tooth picks that cause issues. Smaller items just pass through unaided.If a commercially available product is causing consumers to ingest small lumps and shards of plastic, that's an obvious health hazard.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?