Re Paper
Re Paper
Re Paper
PLANET OR PLASTIC
A RESEARCH PAPER
SUBMITTED TO MS. CORAZON FUENTES
INTRODUCTION
Plastic is a polymeric material—that is, a material whose molecules are very large,
links. Natural polymers such as rubber and silk exist in abundance, but nature’s “plastics”
have not been implicated in environmental pollution, because they do not persist in the
environment. Today, however, the average consumer comes into daily contact with all
kinds of plastic materials that have been developed specifically to defeat natural decay
processes—materials derived mainly from petroleum that can be molded, cast, spun, or
applied as a coating. Since synthetic plastics are largely nonbiodegradable, they tend to
and packaging materials, which account for approximately 50 percent of all plastics
produced, are not deposited in containers for subsequent removal to landfills, recycling
centres, or incinerators. Instead, they are improperly disposed of at or near the location
where they end their usefulness to the consumer. Dropped on the ground, thrown out of
a car window, heaped onto an already full rubbish bin, or inadvertently carried off by a
gust of wind, they immediately begin to pollute the environment (Moore, 2019).
The planet is currently challenged with one of the most problematic environmental
issues today. This issue is the Plastic Pollution. Plastic pollution is the accumulation in
the environment of synthetic plastic products to the point where they create problems for
wildlife and their habitats as well as for human populations. Plastic pollution affects the
JMJ Marist Brothers
Notre Dame of Marbel University
COLLEGE DEPARTMENT
City of Koronadal, South Cotabato
world, particularly the bodies of water (e.g. oceans, lakes, rivers) as most plastic rubbish
In an international context, from the year 1950 (when there was a rapid growth of
plastic usage) until 2015, the cumulative production of polymers, synthetic fibers and
additives was 8300 million tonnes; 2500 million tonnes (30 percent) of primary plastics
was still in use in 2015; 4600 million tonnes (55 percent) went straight to landfill or was
discarded; 700 million tonnes (8 percent) was incinerated; 500 million tonnes (6 percent)
was recycled (100 million tonnes of recycled plastic was still in use; 100 million tonnes
was later incinerated; and 300 million tonnes was later discarded or sent to landfill). Of
the 5800 million tonnes of primary plastic no longer in use, only 9 percent has been
Phys.org, the country uses a "shocking" amount of single-use plastic, including nearly 60
billion sachets a year. every day, almost 48 million shopping bags are used throughout
the Philippines, adding up to more than 17 billion a year. And that figure does not include
the smaller, thinner and often transparent plastic bags known as "labo" bags—around
16.5 billion of those are used per year across the country.
JMJ Marist Brothers
Notre Dame of Marbel University
COLLEGE DEPARTMENT
City of Koronadal, South Cotabato
RELATED READINGS
Our ocean and the array of species that call it home are succumbing to the poison
of plastic. Examples abound, from the gray whale that died after stranding near Seattle in
2010 with more than 20 plastic bags, a golf ball, and other rubbish in its stomach to the
harbor seal pup found dead on the Scottish island of Skye, its intestines fouled by a small
piece of plastic wrapper. According to the United Nations, at least 800 species worldwide
are affected by marine debris, and as much as 80 percent of that litter is plastic. It is
estimated that up to 13 million metric tons of plastic ends up in the ocean each year—the
equivalent of rubbish or garbage truck load’s worth every minute. Fish, seabirds, sea
turtles, and marine mammals can become entangled in or ingest plastic debris, causing
suffocation, starvation, and drowning. A recent study found that sea turtles that ingest just
14 pieces of plastic have an increased risk of death. The young are especially at risk
because they are not as selective as their elders about what they eat and tend to drift with
currents, just as plastic does. Plastic waste can encourage the growth of pathogens in
the ocean.
https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/articles/2018/09/24/plastic-pollution-affects-sea-life-
throughout-the-ocean
There are 500 times more pieces of microplastic in the sea than there are stars in
our galaxy and by 2050 it is estimated there will be more plastic than fish. Cheap, capable
JMJ Marist Brothers
Notre Dame of Marbel University
COLLEGE DEPARTMENT
City of Koronadal, South Cotabato
of being made into any conceivable shape, strong and durable, plastic is something of a
wonder material. It has proved so useful to humans that since the 1950s we have
produced an estimated 8.3 billion metric tonnes of the stuff. However, the victim of this
success appears to be much of life on Earth. And humans, one day, could find themselves
among them. For some 79 per cent of the plastic produced over the last 70 years has
been thrown away, either into landfill sites or into the general environment. Just nine per
cent is recycled with the rest incinerated. With more than eight million tonnes going into
the oceans every year, it is estimated there will be more plastic than fish by 2050 and 99
per cent of all the seabirds on the planet will have consumed some. It is thought the sea
now contains some 51 trillion microplastic particles – 500 times more than stars in our
galaxy.
It is found all over the planet, with 300 billion pieces in the once-pristine Arctic and
a remote island in the Pacific, the uninhabited Henderson Island, one of the Pitcairns,
believed to have the highest concentration of plastic pollution in the world. Perhaps not
Earth-shattering, but definitely Earth-trashing. Plastic may end up being one of the
defining characteristics of a new epoch in the planet’s history. Eventually, the layer of
plastic spread around the world from the 1950s onwards will form a noticeable line in the
sedimentary rocks of the future. And that is one reason – along with radioactive fallout
from nuclear bomb tests, pollution, climate change effects such as higher sea levels, and
the extinction of many animal species – that geologists are considering declaring the end
of the Holocene and the beginning of the Anthropocene or the ‘Epoch of the Humans’. In
JMJ Marist Brothers
Notre Dame of Marbel University
COLLEGE DEPARTMENT
City of Koronadal, South Cotabato
a few decades, a blink of an eye in Earth's 4.5-billion-year history, plastic has not only
https://www.independent.co.uk/environment/plastic-how-planet-earth-environment-oceans-wildlife-
recycling-landfill-artificial-a7972226.html
III. Plastics, the environment and human health: current consensus and future
trends
Plastics have transformed everyday life; usage is increasing and annual production
is likely to exceed 300 million tonnes by 2010. In this concluding paper to the Theme
understanding of the benefits and concerns surrounding the use of plastics and look to
future priorities, challenges and opportunities. It is evident that plastics bring many
societal benefits and offer future technological and medical advances. However, concerns
about usage and disposal are diverse and include accumulation of waste in landfills and
in natural habitats, physical problems for wildlife resulting from ingestion or entanglement
in plastic, the leaching of chemicals from plastic products and the potential for plastics to
transfer chemicals to wildlife and humans. However, perhaps the most important
overriding concern, which is implicit throughout this volume, is that our current usage is
not sustainable. Around 4 per cent of world oil production is used as a feedstock to make
plastics and a similar amount is used as energy in the process. Yet over a third of current
production is used to make items of packaging, which are then rapidly discarded. Given
our declining reserves of fossil fuels, and finite capacity for disposal of waste to landfill,
JMJ Marist Brothers
Notre Dame of Marbel University
COLLEGE DEPARTMENT
City of Koronadal, South Cotabato
this linear use of hydrocarbons, via packaging and other short-lived applications of plastic,
is simply not sustainable. There are solutions, including material reduction, design for
analyses and revised risk assessment approaches. Such measures will be most effective
through the combined actions of the public, industry, scientists and policymakers. There
is some urgency, as the quantity of plastics produced in the first 10 years of the current
century is likely to approach the quantity produced in the entire century that preceded.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2873021/
Did you know that a species of bacteria that resides in the ocean is responsible for
producing 10% of the oxygen that we breathe in? Now, a new study has found that the
plastic polluting the world's oceans is negatively affecting the oxygen levels that these
Australia have examined the effects that plastics have on a type of photosynthetic marine
bacteria called Prochlorococcus. They have published their findings in the journal
Communications Biology. "These tiny microorganisms are critical to the marine food web,
contribute to carbon cycling, and are thought to be responsible for up to 10% of the total
Up to 12.7 million tons of plastic enter the ocean every year, posing a risk to the
nearly 200 marine species — from mammals and birds to fish and invertebrates — that
JMJ Marist Brothers
Notre Dame of Marbel University
COLLEGE DEPARTMENT
City of Koronadal, South Cotabato
may ingest it. In 2018, Medical News Today reported on research showing that humans
also unwittingly consume microplastics and debated what the effect of this might be on
our health. Recently, a report by the conservation organization Fauna & Flora
International (FFI), who collaborated with two charities and the Institute of Development
Studies in the United Kingdom, examined the effects of plastic pollution on human
mortality. The report found that every 30 seconds, a person in the developing world dies
The problem of plastic pollution is getting worse, with projections suggesting that
by 2050, the amount of plastic in the ocean will outweigh the number of fish by weight.
chemicals that they had extracted from plastic grocery bags and PVC matting. They found
that this exposure significantly reduced the growth and function of bacteria compared with
the control bacteria. The researchers observed alterations in the expression of the
bacteria's genes, meaning that the genes were not activating in the usual way to produce
the required proteins. Most importantly, the researchers found that the bacteria that they
exposed to the plastic chemicals produced lower levels of oxygen than the control
bacteria. Lead author Sasha Tetu explains the wider implications of her team's findings,
saying, "Our data shows that plastic pollution may have widespread ecosystem impacts
beyond the known effects on macroorganisms, such as seabirds and turtles." "If we truly
want to understand the full impact of plastic pollution in the marine environment and find
ways to mitigate it, we need to consider its impact on key microbial groups, including
photosynthetic microbes."
JMJ Marist Brothers
Notre Dame of Marbel University
COLLEGE DEPARTMENT
City of Koronadal, South Cotabato
https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/325264.php
Different plastics spread throughout the ocean. As Styrofoam breaks into smaller
parts, polystyrene components in it sink lower in the ocean, so that the pollutant spreads
throughout the sea column. In fact, not only do the toxins in plastic affect the ocean, but
acting like sponges; they soak up other toxins from outside sources before entering the
ocean. As these chemicals are ingested by animals in the ocean, this is not good for
There are different types of ways that plastic is dangerous for humans. Direct
toxicity from plastics comes from lead, cadmium, and mercury. These toxins have also
been found in many fish in the ocean, which is very dangerous for humans. Diethylhexyl
plastics are directly linked to cancers, birth defects, immune system problems, and
childhood developmental issues. Other types of toxic plastics are BPA or health-
bisphenol-A, along with phthalates (mentioned above). Both of these are of great concern
to human health. BPA is used in many things including plastic bottles and food packaging
materials. Over time the polymer chains of BPA break down, and can enter the human
body in many ways from drinking contaminated water to eating a fish that is exposed to
the broken down toxins. Specifically, BPA is a known chemical that interferes with human
Engineering and Arizona State University has studied plastics adverse effects on humans
and has thus far concluded that and exact outline of health effects of plastics on humans
JMJ Marist Brothers
Notre Dame of Marbel University
COLLEGE DEPARTMENT
City of Koronadal, South Cotabato
is almost impossible to determine. This is due to the fact that the problem of plastic
That being said, it is evident that the chemicals are not healthy for humans.
https://serc.carleton.edu/NAGTWorkshops/health/case_studies/plastics.html
VI. 88 Pounds of Plastic Were Found Inside a Dead Whale in the Philippines
A whale that washed ashore in a coastal Philippines province was revealed to have
88 pounds of plastic trash inside its body, New York Times reports. The 1,100-pound
whale, found Saturday in the town of Mabini, had more than 40 pounds of plastic bags
inside its stomach. D’Bone Collector Museum, a nonprofit organization that aims to
retrieve and preserve wildlife, identified the mammal as a male cuvier beaked whale in a
Facebook post. “This whale had the most plastic we have ever seen in a whale. It’s
disgusting,” the post read. The museum added that they also found 16 rice sacks, four
banana plantation-style bags and multiple shopping bags during the necropsy. “The
plastic in some areas was so compact it was almost becoming calcified, almost like a
solid brick,” Darrell Blatchley, president of the museum, told the Times.
In April 2018, a 33-foot sperm whale was found dead on a Spanish beach with
more than 60 pounds of garbage in its digestive system, and a few months later, in June,
a pilot whale died in southern Thailand after eating more than 80 plastic bags. When
whales ingest plastic, it gives them a sense of fullness without providing any essential
nutrients. This leads to reduced weight, energy and swimming speed, increasing their
discarded plastic that ends up in the ocean, just behind two other Asian nations, China
and Indonesia, according to a 2015 report released by Ocean Conservancy and the
https://time.com/5554027/dead-whale-plastic-philippines/
An audit in the Philippines has shown the country uses a "shocking" amount of
single-use plastic, including nearly 60 billion sachets a year. The report, produced by the
push for government action to reduce plastic waste. It contains eye-popping figures: every
day, almost 48 million shopping bags are used throughout the Philippines, adding up to
The figures are based on 21 waste assessments conducted in six cities and seven
municipalities across the Philippines, with the national figures produced by extrapolating
from local results. More than half of non-recyclable plastic analysed in the survey came
from sachets—small plastic packets often lined with aluminium or containing other
materials that make them non-recyclable. "On a per capita basis, it's about one sachet
per person per day," said Froilan Grate, executive director of GAIA's Asia-Pacific office.
"But on a per year, per city basis, it's quite shocking. It runs into the millions and billions
Small portions of products ranging from coffee to shampoo are often sold in sachets in
the Philippines, and are seen as an affordable solution for consumers. But Grate said the
JMJ Marist Brothers
Notre Dame of Marbel University
COLLEGE DEPARTMENT
City of Koronadal, South Cotabato
"If you go to the supermarkets, it's rare for you to be able to buy coffee in bigger
containers, it's all in sachets," he said. The survey is the first time an organisation has
tried to quantify sachet use, and the NGO hopes to pressure both the government and
industry to take action on curbing single-use plastic. The report found that where local-
level plastic bag bans have been put in place and rigorously enforced, usage has dropped
ban that promotes reusable bags". And it wants regulations on other single-use plastic
products and rules requiring companies to redesign products and packaging to minimise
plastic waste. Grate said it was hard to compare plastic usage in the Philippines with other
"That's a problem and is our main reason for doing this (survey)." Plastic pollution is a
major problem in the Philippines, which—along with China, Vietnam and Indonesia—is
frequently listed among the world's worst offenders, particularly on marine plastic
pollution.
https://phys.org/news/2019-03-philippines-survey-plastic.html
In the midst of the 21st century, plastic pollution became a noticeable issue. This
was when a single speck of translucent non-heavy material was seen, floating around the
waters, by the fishermen. Plastic are used to create useful materials for human
JMJ Marist Brothers
Notre Dame of Marbel University
COLLEGE DEPARTMENT
City of Koronadal, South Cotabato
consumption. The most common are the plastic bags. Plastic is also used to make toys,
sports equipment, food packaging, candy wrappers, plastic straws, bottles for any
drinkable liquid substances, etc. There are many types of plastic such as the PET
(Polystyrene), and EPS (Expanded Polystyrene). Due to the plastic’s light weight, smooth
surface, and flexibility, it can be turned into any shape. This makes it possible for most
Littering is one of the most common illegal acts that can be done by a human being. It is
an act of throwing rubbish or waste products and letting it lie around places, making its
physical outlook untidy. There are many countries that strongly prohibits or bans littering,
Hawaii, New York, Argentina, Brazil, Wales, Seattle, South Africa, Uganda, and many
more. These countries have already dealt with plastic bag issues. There are some
countries, however, that are yet to deal with the plastic pollution issue, such as Thailand,
Vietnam, Egypt, and China. According to the Earth Day Network’s statistics in 2018,
Philippines is ranked as the third largest contributor of plastic waste to global waters, after
Indonesia and China. Another report from the UN Environment stated that there were five
countries that have contributed much to pollution such as China, Indonesia, Philippines,
The Philippines is now dealing with an ocean pollution crisis. According to Andrew
Wynne’s report from the Ocean Conservancy, the Philippines became a major vector for
JMJ Marist Brothers
Notre Dame of Marbel University
COLLEGE DEPARTMENT
City of Koronadal, South Cotabato
waste products, including plastics that are flowing into the global ocean. The Philippine
government has legislated a number of environmental laws that would minimize solid
wastes like the Republic Act 6969 or the Toxic Substances and Hazardous and Nuclear
Waste Control Act of 1990. The United Nations Environment Programme or UNEP
Environment Day 2018 on the 5th of June. It was done in order to spread awareness and
to prevent spread of this pollution which continues to worsen. The bright side of this
movement is that it managed to get attention from the people, but the UN knew they
needed to do more than that. They are reminding everyone to act and be aware of this
https://pia.gov.ph/news/articles/1014780
IX. What a load of rubbish: The impact of the Philippines’ sachet economy
The last coastal frontier in the Philippine capital provides refuge to migratory birds
and a thick mangrove forest there serves as a natural typhoon barrier for millions of city
dwellers. Yet empty plastic water and soda bottles protrude from the sand, tattered
clothes and plastic sheets hang over mangrove branches, and heaps of shampoo,
toothpaste and soy sauce sachets litter the coastline. The trash offers a filthy contrast to
the tantalizing sunsets Manila Bay is famous for. It also illustrates strikingly the enormity
of the garbage problem facing this developing nation of more than 100 million people. An
JMJ Marist Brothers
Notre Dame of Marbel University
COLLEGE DEPARTMENT
City of Koronadal, South Cotabato
archipelago of over 7,100 islands, the Philippines is the third worst ocean plastic polluter
in the world, after China and Indonesia, according to a 2015 study in the journal Science.
as mounting research reveals the danger it poses to lifeforms across the food web. The
Philippines generates an estimated 43,684 tons of garbage daily, including 4,609 tons of
plastic waste, according to government data, and proper disposal facilities are lacking for
much of it. The trash is piling up on land, clogging coastlines, spilling into the sea, and
travelling to remote corners of the globe as the country fails to meet targets for improved
waste management that it signed into law 18 years ago. The central government claims
it’s done all it can, and that the onus is on local governments to get their trash in order
and on the Philippine people to dispose of their garbage more responsibly. But
Two hours north of Manila, San Fernando City, the capital of Pampanga province,
bucks the trend in Philippine waste management. Environmentalists laud the local
government’s effort to address its garbage problem. San Fernando City is home to around
Philippine society. In 2007, it created the City Environment and Natural Resources Office,
primarily to address its trash problem. The city extended PHP150,000 (about US$3,000)
to each village for the construction of materials recovery facilities (MRFs) and the
purchase of pushcarts and rickshaw bicycles to collect waste. Since 2012, the Manila-
JMJ Marist Brothers
Notre Dame of Marbel University
COLLEGE DEPARTMENT
City of Koronadal, South Cotabato
based advocacy group Mother Earth Foundation (MEF) has provided technical assistance
Today, over 100 MRFs exist across the city, including in schools, subdivisions and
public markets, according to Sherma Benosa, a communications officer with the Global
belongs. As a result, the city’s spending on tipping fees for waste disposal came in nearly
three-quarters under projections for 2017: just PHP18 million (US$334,000) instead of
PHP70 million (US$1.3 million). “These achievements were made possible because the
city implemented a multi-pronged and ambitious solid waste management program, with
strategies designed to encourage and incentivize participation from local officials and
citizens,” Benosa said. San Fernando is also one of the few LGUs in the country that has
an active solid waste management board with representation from relevant sectors,
including waste workers and youth. The board meets regularly and acts promptly to create
or adjust the city’s waste management program. The city’s mayor, Edwin Santiago,
attributed San Fernando’s effective garbage collection to the active participation of his
constituents. “We are involving all sectors because waste is everybody’s problem,” he
said. “It cannot be done by the government alone. People’s participation is important.”
https://asiancorrespondent.com/2018/10/rubbish-impact-philippines-plastic-sachet-economy-environment/
The low cost and convenience of plastic sachets, as well as inefficient waste
disposal, has made the Philippines one of the world’s leading plastic polluters, with
JMJ Marist Brothers
Notre Dame of Marbel University
COLLEGE DEPARTMENT
City of Koronadal, South Cotabato
awareness of the problem. For its 2017 International Coastal Clean-Up, Ocean
Conservancy mobilized over half a million people to collect 8,346,055 kg of trash over
more than 24,000 km of coastline worldwide. This included over 1.8 million cigarette butts
and 1.5 million plastic bottles, according to the organization’s report. Unfortunately, some
countries in the Coral Triangle are contributing significantly to this volume. Recent reports,
the Philippines as one of the world’s top plastic polluters. “Because of plastic debris, we
are altering the most important ecosystem of our country, which are our coastal regions,”
says WWF-Philippines President and CEO Joel Palma. “Already, scientists are saying
that in a few decades, there will be more plastic in our oceans than fish."
clean-ups to address marine debris, or waste and other foreign materials ending up in the
oceans. “WWF is raising awareness both online, through social media posts, and offline,
“Transformative corporate partnerships are also being pursued to lessen the usage of
Two main factors can be blamed for such tremendous amounts of garbage in this
archipelago, particularly plastics. First, mainly because of poverty levels, people still buy
many products in small amounts—cheaper, but resulting in much more waste. “As the
Philippines is one of the so-called ‘sachet economies,’ most of the debris gathered during
clean-ups are plastics, including single-use sachets for shampoo, toothpaste, creams,
laundry soap, and even food,” Ramirez notes. Because these are easy to sell—ribbons
of single-use products hang from neighborhood stores even in the most remote
https://wwf.panda.org/knowledge_hub/where_we_work/coraltriangle/?329831/The-scourge-of-single-use-
plastic-in-the-Philippines
From the gathered data (related readings), It is clear that the planet is more
important than the plastic. Plastics may be very useful in man’s everyday life. But,
throughout the years, man became very irresponsible with regards to the proper disposal
of the so-called plastic. The issue here is not on the plastic per se but on its improper
disposal. The environment, specifically the marine life, is most affected by plastic
segregation and they dispose of their garbage in bodies of water. This, in turn, affects the
sea animals, as either they are trapped in mounds of plastic or they eat the plastic.
JMJ Marist Brothers
Notre Dame of Marbel University
COLLEGE DEPARTMENT
City of Koronadal, South Cotabato
With this, I personally feel disgusted by this irresponsible human activity. In the
book of Genesis from the Old Testament of the Holy Bible, we are tasked by God to be
stewards of his creation. It is as if most people have forgotten this task that God gave to
us (and they must have only remembered the “Go forth and multiply” command with the
overpopulation we are experiencing). I hope and I pray that through this simple Research
Paper and with the help of Religious Education, everyone will be reminded to be the
stewards and co-creators of God, and not the destroyers of His creations.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Moore, C. (2019, March 12). Plastic pollution. Retrieved August 5, 2019, from
https://www.britannica.com/science/plastic-pollution
Ritchie, H., & Roser, M. (2018, September 01). Plastic Pollution. Retrieved
Philippines survey shows 'shocking' plastic waste. (2019, March 08). Retrieved
from https://phys.org/news/2019-03-philippines-survey-plastic.html
Reddy, S. (2018, September 24). Plastic Pollution Affects Sea Life Throughout
analysis/articles/2018/09/24/plastic-pollution-affects-sea-life-throughout-the-ocean
https://www.independent.co.uk/environment/plastic-how-planet-earth-environment-
oceans-wildlife-recycling-landfill-artificial-a7972226.html
Thompson, R., Moore, C., Vom Saal, F., & Swan, S. (2009). Plastics, the
environment and human health: Current consensus and future trends. Plastics, the
doi:10.1098/rstb.2009.0053
https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/325264.php
Andrews, G. (2018, August 03). Plastics in the Ocean Affecting Human Health.
https://serc.carleton.edu/NAGTWorkshops/health/case_studies/plastics.html
Leung, H. (2019, March 19). 88 Pounds of Plastic Found Inside Dead Whale in
plastic-philippines/
Pia-Dcu. (2018, November 7). Plastic Pollution: Still a big thing? Retrieved
Philippine Marine Debris. (2019, June 22). Retrieved August 5, 2019, from
https://wwf.panda.org/knowledge_hub/where_we_work/coraltriangle/?329831/The-
scourge-of-single-use-plastic-in-the-Philippines