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Facial scrubs release 94,500 toxic microbeads in each wash, research finds

Plastic beads in facewash 'can even end up in the seafood on our plate,' says Greenpeace

Harriet Agerholm
Monday 25 July 2016 13:36 EDT
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The plastic beads out leach out poisonous chemicals which kill marine life
The plastic beads out leach out poisonous chemicals which kill marine life (Getty Images)

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The numbers of polluting plastic beads commonly found in everyday face scrub have been revealed by scientists.

Researchers at Plymouth University found that each time facewash is used, 94,500 “microbeads” can be released into the oceans.

The small plastic balls, also found in toothpaste, are too small to be filtered out by sewage systems before they reach rivers and seas. They are then eaten by marine life.

“It can be hard to convey in words how small these beads are and how many are released by one wash,” Richard Thompson, Professor of Marine Biology at the university, told The Sunday Times.

Microbeads are one of the fastest growing forms of marine pollution. Once eaten by one animal, they can travel up the food chain.

A petition by Greenpeace against the use of microbeads in products has been signed by more than 300,000 people.

"These plastics go straight down our drains and into the sea," Louise Edge, from Greepeace, said in a statement.

"There they can cause serious harm to marine life by being eaten and leaching out toxic chemicals. They can even end up in the seafood on our plate – the health consequences of which are still unknown."

Already illegal in the US and Canada, Greenpeace are calling on the newly appointed Environment Secretary, Andrea Leadsom, to take a stand against microbeads.

"The UK Government has already said it agrees that a ban on microbeads is the right way forward," Ms Edge said.

"Andrea Leadsom, has some big challenges ahead of her, but banning microbeads would be a simple and effective way to hit the ground running."

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