Environmental Sciences, asked by shreyachamling522, 4 months ago

problems of plastic
pollution​

Answers

Answered by BoldTouch
6

 \huge{●The  \:  \: Problem  \:  \: Of  \:  \: Plastics}

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Plastic is a polymeric material—that is, a material whose molecules are very large, often resembling long chains made up of a seemingly endless series of interconnected 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 persist in natural environments. Moreover, many lightweight single-use plastic products 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. Indeed, landscapes littered by plastic packaging have become common in many parts of the world. (Illegal dumping of plastic and overflowing of containment structures also play a role.)

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Answered by blpareek1963
1

Explanation:

the problem of plastic is the plastic eated by many animals like cows , dog, ext that not goog for animals plastic harm and also for humans also plastic, harm . the plastic also have mess you can see in citys many messy .

i hope you thats work

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