The Canadian government has announced a ban on microbeads, and this progressive move will keep this harmful plastic pollutant out of Canada’s waterways. When products containing microbeads, such as cleansers, lotions and toothpastes, are used and rinsed down the drain, these bits of plastic — typically 1.0 millimetre or smaller in diameter — are too small to be caught by wastewater treatment facilities. Instead, they are flushed directly into lakes, rivers and streams, where they wreak havoc on wildlife. Scientists have found millions of microbeads in the Great Lakes, with the highest concentrations occurring near urban areas.
New
- 5 Ways Seabed Disturbance Changes a Dive Site
- Diver Dies Off Jeju Island During Scuba Dive, Investigation Underway
- Body of Missing Diver Recovered Off Honolulu After Multi-Agency Search
- Divers Rescued After 20-Hour Ordeal Off North Stradbroke Island
- British Diver Anthony Thompson Dies in Malta Diving Incident
- Tourist Charged After Boat Captain Stabbed on Hawaii Snorkel Tour
- Why Do Some Divers Get Decompression Sickness While Others Don’t? New Red Sea Study Aims to Find Out
- DEEP Opens Applications for UK HSE Closed Bell Diver Training Program
