If you want to check out the sources for this video, we made a reading list for you. More from Explainers What do we get wrong when we talk about ocean plastic? A lot, it turns out. Business ...
To raise awareness of the pervasiveness of plastic pollution and drive public action to address it, WWF released a new video ...
The world has a plastic problem, especially in our planet’s oceans. In fact, the Great Pacific Garbage Patch covers an estimated area around twice the size of the state of Texas. Now ...
A farmer has encouraged people to avoid buying plastic decorations and stop wasting real pumpkins. Beach Buddies says there is a "growing trend" of household waste being left in its coastal bins.
Scientists from the University of Leeds have used AI modelling to reveal the 10 countries responsible for the most plastic ...
The health, resilience and productivity of marine and coastal ecosystems is increasingly affected by pollution, including land-based nutrient, pesticide and plastic pollution. WWF and our supporters ...
Final negotiations for the first-ever United Nations treaty on plastic pollution are due to take place at the end of November. The latest treaty draft states two major objectives: to end plastic ...
By Hiroko Tabuchi Scientists have found plastic pollution almost everywhere they have looked. In clouds. On Mount Everest. In Arctic snow. Now, for the first time, tiny plastic particles have been ...
More information: Dong Sheng et al, Plastic pollution in agricultural landscapes: an overlooked threat to pollination, biocontrol and food security, Nature Communications (2024). DOI: 10.1038 ...
testosteroni’s ability to break down plastic. Though the bacteria are promising tools for combating pollution, they are not quite ready to be thrown into wastewater treatment plants and ...
Two weeks after birth, two newborn rats—one male and one female—were tested for micro- and nanoplastic exposure. In both cases, the same type of plastic that the mothers inhaled during ...
Researchers have discovered bottled water sold in stores can contain 10 to 100 times more bits of plastic than previously estimated. Plastic made from seaweed and milk that doesn't come from a cow.