Phil Pascoe
Established Member
And yet, amazingly, they shrugged it off, apparently with little damage to their popularity.
I was likewise amazed at how either Coke or Pepsi (I can't remember which)recovered from the DasaniGate.
Coca Cola.
And yet, amazingly, they shrugged it off, apparently with little damage to their popularity.
I was likewise amazed at how either Coke or Pepsi (I can't remember which)recovered from the DasaniGate.
Burying high carbon garbage in a way which does not allow it to decay, is sequestering carbon. Would also have to be replacing plastic with sustainable alternatives, but this was never a problem in the past. Modern plastic products were virtually unknown when I was a kid.
I would bother with every bit of plastic - it might not be recycled but if it is burnt then at least it wont be choking turtles or whatever.
For sure, and I was not intending to criticise you. However landfill/incinerate/recycle all take it out of random environment maybe saving turtles. Unless the plastic decomposes faster or more obnoxiously in the landfill, it is producing no more pollutant than if it were strangling turtles. A big pile of plastic decomposing will produce a higher concentration of pollutants with more noticeable adverse side effects though.I'm the complainer here, but I still put all of the plastic in the recycle bin. *all* of it. But when someone doesn't or no can is available, I don't fret it. If you look at my statistics, the chance that any excess that you provide gets burned is basically zero.
That could seem to be a deception - people who believe that the problem is being addressed are less likely to modify their behaviour or call for change.People at the point of use and purchase should be aware of how little of their plastics are actually returned to service as plastic again later. the lobbying agencies for "recycling" are operating at best on idealism when they ignore reality and encourage people to continue use and recycling.
No need to dig new holes we could just backfill the old ones. I live about half a mile from this hole - typical of many in Derbyshire.......
I do like the idea of burying plastic - it came from under the ground so I see no problem putting it back. It may break down eventually, but perhaps slower than above ground, and it wont be choking turtles. Of course there will be those that use this as justification for digging a new coal mine - think of all the plastic we can bury.
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........... I side with the scientests who dispute climate change is as bad as is being made out.
Could do with some help on this.....There are actually scientists who question the settled science, and have different hypotheses, but you have to look hard to find any prepared to raise their heads above the parapet. I will leave you to research on your own, if you want to. Entirely up to you.
There is always a scientific fringe with more radical theories to add to a debate.
Often they are scientists who have yet to, or are unlikely to ever, achieve fame and glory. They want their chance in the spotlight. There are those once in the public spotlight whose star has now faded, and desperately want to return (a bit llike "D" list celebrity masterchef etc).
Their one hope is that they will challenge the consensus and with the benefit of hindsight later be proven right. They dream of Nobel prizes, public acclaim, etc which they are unlikely to achieve through intellect alone.
Up until a couple of years ago I used bottled water - because I like the fizzy stuff. Finally I decided that my preferences did not justify the plastic waste and started buying fizzy water in bottles. Then I figured that the transport of water and glass was too expensive for environment. I miss fizzy water, and it is my drink of choice at pubs and restaurants......
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