"In order for #PVA to #biodegrade, special PVA-adapted microbes need to be added at high levels and for long durations. Currently, most water treatment facilities do not sufficiently treat PVA in water, and therefore poses a series of environmental and safety concerns. "
Also:
"the production of PVA film involves heavy environmental and safety burdens in carcinogenic toxins, ozone depletion, acidification, eutrophication, and fossil fuel depletion."
https://dirtylabs.com/blogs/the-dirt/ask-dr-pete-are-laundry-pods-and-sheets-really-sustainable
I will now stop using laundry pods.
Even while acknowledging that their contribution to microplastics is small.
The major contributors to microplastics in the oceans:
Synthetic textiles
(They make me sweat unpleasantly, so I stay away from those, too),
Car tires
(why I bike: skinny tires, a lot less wear!)
City dust
(Guessing that includes the two above, plus house paint and such).
From:
https://www.statista.com/chart/17957/where-the-oceans-microplastics-come-from/
I will now stop using laundry pods.
Even while acknowledging that their contribution to microplastics is small.
The major contributors to microplastics in the oceans:
Synthetic textiles
(They make me sweat unpleasantly, so I stay away from those, too),
Car tires
(why I bike: skinny tires, a lot less wear!)