Science and Industry are Gearing Up to Fight Back
By Mary Lhowe / ecoRI News contributor
Some of us may remember the bracing and virtuous feel of brushing our teeth or washing our face with pastes that seemed to contain a pinch of beach sand or salt; didn’t we feel cleaner than clean?
Well,
remembering is all that’s left. Those toothpastes and skin scrubs did their
work with tiny beads of plastic, very small and poorly understood pollutants
that are moving by the tons into waterways, soil, animals, food, and our own
bodies.
The Microbead-Free Waters Act of
2015 banned those tiny plastic beads from exfoliating scrubs
and toothpastes, but that small action is just a grab at the lowest-hanging
fruit of a global problem. The environmental threat of microplastics — created mainly by the
breakdown of plastic waste — continues. In the past decade, scientists are
working harder to capture, measure, and evaluate the danger of microplastics in
places like Narragansett Bay.
Also, microplastic fibers, a worrisome subset of
microplastics, have caught the attention of the textile industry, which brings
the fibers into being, which now wants to find ways to capture and reuse them.
Microplastic
is defined as any bits of plastic up to 5 millimeters in size. They can be
spherical, jagged, or any random shape. They are created by the physical and
chemical breakdown of plastic waste, and are found everywhere on Earth,
including the depths of the oceans, on mountaintops, and in the flesh of
animals and breast milk of humans.
It
is estimated that 44% to 50% of sea birds, sea turtles, otters, and fish have
eaten or been entangled in plastic debris. Research is looking at the internal
damage to animals, especially sea life, that ingest plastic, and to the people
who eat the animals that have plastic in their bodies. A related question is
whether microplastics in the environment act as a vector to absorb and transmit
bacteria.
Natural
fibers, such as cotton, linen, wool, and silk, shed their fibers, as do
polyester, rayon, acetate, and all of the other mixes of synthetic fabrics that
originate in an oil well.
Experts
estimate that about 9 million metric tons of plastic enter the world’s oceans
every year, according to Beyond Plastics.
About 85% of microplastic waste in the environment is believed to be
microfibers. About 100 million tons of textiles was produced across the globe
in 2016, said Martin Bide, retired professor from the Department of Textiles,
Fashion Merchandising and Design at the University of Rhode Island. Also in
that year, he said, 62.7% of the global fiber market was polyester fibers.
As
scientists troll the Earth’s waters for microplastics to document and study,
people in the textile, fashion, and design industries are trying to come up
with ways to collect waste plastic and, stated simply, to melt and then spin
the plastic into filaments and fibers that are then used to weave new cloth.
This
work to retrieve and reuse junk plastic is a variation of the reduce, recycle,
refill, and reuse mantra that is aimed now at all forms of throwaway materials.
Microfibers, from natural materials like cotton and petroleum-based materials like polyester, enter the environment in a dizzying variety of ways, some more obvious than others. During normal wear and movement of clothing, sails, rope, and even cigarette butts, the fibers are shed into the environment.
Fabrics
that are tightly woven, with longer fibers, will shed less and more slowly.
Short, loose-weave fibers shed quicker. In the world of microplastic fibers,
one of the worst offenders is fleece, a plastic-based, fluffy cloth.
One of the major ways fibers enter the environment is via the rinse water of washing machines. Judith Weis, a retired marine biology professor from Rutgers University in New Jersey, has studied this phenomenon extensively.
Wastewater
that goes into public sewer systems is filtered out of the water and into a
sludge, a byproduct of treatment. This filtering captures about 90% of
microfibers, but, given the enormous volume of these fibers, that still leaves
a lot of fibers in the treated water, which is eventually released into
waterways.
More
alarming, sludge may be spread on land, Weis said. If spread on farmland, it
can enter farm crops through their normal uptake of nutrients from the soil. If
spread on other lands, it can enter the bodies of insects, worms, and birds and
into the open air.
“You
have just moved the pollution from one place to another,” Weis said.
Scientists
don’t know the effect of microplastics on animals, humans, or the environment.
“We can only guess,” Weis said.
At
URI, an interdepartmental group of about 50 academics are part of a “laboratory
without walls” that is working on a variety of interdisciplinary tasks to
understand and reduce this form of pollution. They are sampling the waters of
Narragansett Bay, feeding microplastic fibers to oysters and sea urchins,
figuring out how to convert plastic waste to fibers at market-competitive
costs, and devising marketing strategies to educate the public and to persuade
people to buy fewer and sturdier clothes.
In
the business realm, Rhode Island Commerce has given a
grant to U.S. Extruders in Westerly to
experiment with creating plastic fibers from plastic fishing nets. A trade
group, the Rhode Island Textile Innovation Network, is working with Polaris
MEP, an industry consultant, to knit together the various players in the state
that could help create a circular textile economy in which nature-harming
plastic waste is captured and transformed into new products.
More
than one observer has said this is fundamental work for the Ocean State. The
Industrial Revolution was launched in America when Englishman Samuel Slater
smuggled the plans for a textile mill out of England and built Slater Mill in
Pawtucket in 1793. Now, more than 70 textile manufacturers are operating in
Rhode Island, said Peter Snyder, vice president for research and economic
development at URI.
Also,
the health of Narragansett Bay and the wildlife it supports are a big concern
for all Rhode Islanders.
Bide, of URI, said the evolution of textiles as today’s new pollution worry — on scientists’ radar for only about a decade — follows the technical and economic trends at work in America across the decades.
Up to the 1900s, textiles were made of natural fibers such as cotton and wool. The early 20th century brought the invention of synthetic nitrogen fertilizer, followed by nylon as the first oil-based synthetic fiber, then followed by polyester and other synthetic products.
The
sequence continues through the 20th century with cheap oil for
the creation of polyester, efficient machinery for making cheap fabrics, lots
of garments sewn by low-wage workers in the Third World, leading to cheaper
clothes and a fast-fashion industry that flogs consumers into more purchasing.
“Instead
of buy, keep, repair, it became buy, throw away, and buy more,” Bide said.
The
population of the United States has quadrupled since 1900, Bide said, while
textile consumption has gone up 30-fold. At present, the global consumption of
clothes is more than 30 pounds per person annually. In the United States, the
figure is more than 100 pounds. Most of it is polyester.
Assistant
professor Izabel Ciesielska-Wrobel of the textiles department at URI is working
on a model of a solution under a project titled “Conversion of Plastic Waste into
Economically Viable Filaments and Fibers.” The project got underway before she
joined URI, while she was working for Luna Innovations of Virginia. Money from
the U.S. Department of Energy got the project rolling.
At
URI, Ciesielska-Wrobel’s project acquired a $186,000 micro compounder. The
machine starts with waste plastic, then melts it and extrudes a very thin
plastic filament. (Extrude is to create a product by pushing something through
an opening. Imagine making homemade pasta, or the classic Play-Doh toy in which
a load of Play-Doh in a hopper is pushed through a panel of cut-out shapes.)
Of
course, the process is not that simple, partly because of the variety of
polymers and additives in any plastic. “Some materials are not admissible” into
the process, Ciesielska-Wrobel said, “so you have to use a lot of chemistry to
make them admissible.”
“This
machine offers a lot of possibilities,” she said. “Also, we are adding features
to the materials to make them more interesting to potential customers.” In
fact, she offers some of her monofilament product to use in 3D printing.
Ciesielska-Wrobel
said there is a lot of interest in the business world in converting waste
plastic to usable filaments and fibers. She has worked to some degree with
OceanWorks, a California-based company with an office in Boston, which, she
said, collects trash plastic from all over the world, and then separates and
processes it into usable plastic pellets. She said it is hard to get in touch
with OceanWorks in recent months, implying to her that its business is booming.
“My
goal is to promote this idea everywhere and to try to apply it in every
possible way that I can,” she said.
Similar experimentation — through a project called “Fishing for Solutions” — is now going on at U.S. Extruders, with support from the $43,000 Commerce grant. The company builds extruding machines that, in turn, are used by other manufacturers to extrude products, such as medical tubing.
Business development
officer John Riendeau said the company’s owner, Dan Schilke, was disturbed by
the low level of recycling in the United States and decided to work on a
solution.
The
company decided, Riendeau said, “to do a small representative example of
recycling something that has not been recycling in the past” — that is, fishing
nets, which are mostly plastic except for some removable elements of steel and
rubber.
“The
idea was to take an end-of-life product and turn it into part of the circular
economy,” he added.
U.S. Extruders obtains scraps of fishing nets from Superior Trawl and Trawlworks, net manufacturers in Narragansett, that are byproducts of production. The process includes separating the steel and rubber, cleaning the nets, shredding and granulating the plastic, and producing plastic pellets to be sold to a variety of manufacturers of all kinds of products.
The crucial question, Riendeau said,
is whether the cost of producing the recycled plastic can compete with the cost
of making and buying virgin plastic.
Study
of the quantity and effect of microplastics in the environment is relatively
young, and scientists, including marine biologists, are working with special
logistical problems.
Andrew
Davies and Coleen Suckling are associate and assistant professors,
respectively, at URI, and they are studying plastic particles in Narragansett
Bay through the Ocean State Initiative for Marine Plastics.
A
2020 Rhode Island Sea Grant project has allowed them to do surface trawling of
the bay. The work is challenging, said Davies, because of the many different
types of particles in the water, including plastic, that create a “noisy
matrix” that is hard to sort through. Also, different plastics have different
densities and may behave differently in water. At this early stage, their
research has yielded few conclusions.
Scientists also are studying the presence of microplastics on the floor of the bay, in sediments, which ultimately capture an estimated 70% of all microplastics that enter waterways, according to Kay Ho, research scientist for the Environmental Protection Agency who is working on sediment research in Narragansett Bay. Ho said marine scientists find microplastic sediments “everywhere we look,” but the effects of this pollution are still mostly unknown.
Weis, of Rutgers University, said the science of collecting and analyzing microplastics and microfibers in the environment is fraught with difficulties and inconsistencies. In a paper Weis co-wrote with Francesca De Falco, a member of the School of Biological and Marine Sciences at the University of Plymouth in England, Weis found some researchers collect samples with types of nets that allow long thin fibers to escape, resulting in a serious undercount of fibers.
“Grab samples” of whole water might get a more accurate count, but they cannot
be usefully compared to samples captured in nets. Laboratory studies that use
purchased samples of microplastic beads mismatch, in several ways, the
conditions in the natural environment.
Some
actions that Weis and De Falco recommend to capture microplastic fibers from
just the limited world of clothing would require a lot of consumer education
and behavior change. These would include buying clothing with tight weave;
washing clothes in full loads, preferably in a front-loading machine (to reduce
agitation); using less detergent; drying clothes on a line instead of in a
clothes dryer. Washing machines with built-in filters that can capture
microfibers do exist, and, in fact, will be mandated in all new washing
machines sold in France in the next few years. Meanwhile, these fine-grain
filters can be purchased and retrofitted onto existing washing machines, Weis
said. One product is the Lint LUV-R.
Karl
Aspelund, associate professor and chairman of the Department of Textiles,
Fashion Merchandising and Design at URI, emphasized that all the
initiatives described here — from combing the bay floor to spinning recycled
plastic into yarns — are things that professionals already know how to do.
“We
don’t have to invent anything to make all of this happen,” Aspelund said. “This
is not something we have to come up with.” The task, which URI is helping to
work on, is “getting people to start working together.”