Biodegradable bags are TOXIC - and may be linked to liver and ovary damage, scientists warn

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They're often marketed as a more environmentally-friendly alternative to traditional plastic bags. 

But a new study might make you rethink reaching for those biodegradable bags.

Experts from Southeast University in China have warned that these 'eco-friendly' options could be toxic. 

In their study, the team looked at the impact consuming biodegradable plastics had on mice. 

Worryingly, they found that mice who consumed particles developed health problems - including liver and ovary damage.

'Biodegradable starch-based plastics may not be as safe and health-promoting as originally assumed,' said Professor Yongfeng Deng, one of the study's authors.

It is already known that microplastics – the nearly invisible plastic particles that are released through wear and tear on plastic products – can enter human bodies through food, drink and even being inhaled.

But the findings raise fresh concerns about the safety of particles from biodegradable, starch-based plastics.

Compostable bags tend to be advertised as 'eco-friendly' with slogans like 'save the planet' - but they could still come with health risks, a study suggests

Bags made from petroleum-based plastics degrade so slowly that they stay in the environment, landfills, beaches and oceans for up to hundreds of years.

Starch-based plastics have been hailed as a safer, more sustainable alternative as they are highly degradable.

To test the potential effects of starch-based plastics, the researchers compared three groups of five mice. 

The first consumed normal food and the other two groups consumed food infused with starch-based microplastics.

The doses – low and high – were calculated and scaled from what an average human is expected to consume daily.

They fed the mice for three months and then assessed their organ tissues, metabolic functions and their gut bacteria.

Analysis revealed that compared to those who ate normal food, the mice exposed to the starch-based plastic particles had multiple damaged organs including the liver and ovaries.

They also found these mice had disruption in their molecular biomarkers linked to sugar and fat metabolism.

Biodegradable bags are usually used to collect food for compost. But they have been linked to liver and ovary damage, the scientists warned 

WHAT ARE MICROPLASTICS? 

  • Microplastics are plastic pieces that measure less than five millimetres across.
  • They form when larger plastic items - such as plastic bags or tyres - break down. 
  • In animals, ingestion can cause physical harm, such as digestive blockages and malnutrition, and in severe cases, it can lead to death. 
  • In laboratory tests, microplastics have also been shown to cause damage to human cells, including both allergic reactions and cell death.

There was also more imbalances in their gut bacteria, which the researchers suggest could alter the body clock.

'Prolonged low-dose exposure to starch-based microplastics can lead to a broad spectrum of health impacts, particularly perturbing circadian rhythms and disrupting glucose and lipid metabolism,' Professor Deng said.

The team said their findings, published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, said further research is needed to understand how these biodegradable particles break down in the body.

They said their results suggest 'that the safety of bioplastics requires further evaluation before their large-scale application in food packages'.

As part of a previous study researchers analysed three types of bags – a compostable bag made of vegetable starch, a recycled plastic bag and a conventional plastic bag.

They exposed them to sunlight to make them break down, and then exposed them to fish cells.

They also then composted them and tested the resulting compost for toxicity.

A 'high level of toxicity' was produced by the biodegradable bags, harming the fish cells, according to the authors from the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC).

Cinta Porte, lead author of the study, published in the Journal of Hazardous Materials, said: 'We were surprised that cells exposed to conventional plastic bags showed no trace of toxicity.

'However, we did detect it in biodegradable ones, which decreased cell viability.

'Our hypothesis is that manufacturers add chemical additives to make biodegradable bags that could be particularly toxic.'

A 5p charge was first introduced in supermarkets in the UK in 2015.

Since then usage at the main retailers – Asda, Marks and Spencer, Morrisons, Sainsbury's, The Co-operative Group, Tesco and Waitrose – has dropped by more than 98 per cent.

The average person in England now buys just two single-use carrier bags a year from these businesses, compared with around 140 in 2014 before the charge was introduced, figures show.

In 2021 the charge was increased to 10p and extended to all businesses.

HOW MUCH PLASTIC POLLUTION DO WE BREATHE IN PER DAY?

Plastic pollution has become so widespread that we may be inhaling up to 130 tiny pieces a day, research found.

Fibres from fleece and polyester clothing and particles from urban dust and car tyres are the biggest sources of so-called microplastics in the air.

Microplastics are small plastic pellets ranging in size from 0.5 millimetres that have accumulated in the marine environment following decades of pollution. They include polyester fibres generated from laundry

The tiny specks are lighter than air and could cause asthma, heart disease and auto-immune conditions, the research, published in December 2017, found.

The study, a review of a number of recent plastics studies, revealed washing a single polyester garment can produce 1,900 plastic fibres.

Plastic pollution has become so widespread that we may be inhaling up to 130 tiny pieces a day, research found (stock image)

This plastic pollution is on the rise as more and more synthetic clothing is produced.

While only people working with plastic fibres are known to develop respiratory problems, experts say the pollution is so widespread that it may now pose a risk to everyone's health.

The study's author, Dr Joana Correia Prata, of Fernando Pessoa University in Portugal, said: 'The evidence suggests that an individual's lungs could be exposed to between 26 and 130 airborne microplastics a day, which would pose a risk for human health, especially in susceptible individuals, including children.

'Exposure may cause asthma, cardiac disease, allergies and auto-immune diseases.'

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