• Evil_Shrubbery@thelemmy.club
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    3 months ago

    Yes, it is. But compared to all plastics production it’s not a third. Much like clothes aren’t a third either.

    But they both release microplastics directly into the air & water, so they enter the circulation quicker. The printer that is gonna end on a landfill will be in the balls of creatures millennia from now.

    • AA5B@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      That printer is not “micro”, it won’t shed detectably, and it will be confined to one part of a landfill

        • AA5B@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          Supposedly you can recycle them, but normally they will be confined to a a small section of landfill. While “on a landfill” is not a good answer, it’s much better than “in the environment “

          You could even argue that leachate is “good” in that it pulls all these contaminants out of the landfill to a concentrated place where they could in theory be removed (and placed in a landfill 🤪)

          • Evil_Shrubbery@thelemmy.club
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            3 months ago

            You can’t recycle them (very poorly at best, with extra harmful byproducts).

            And landfills are not built like nuclear waste storage facilities.

            Everything around us is ‘the environment’.

            • AA5B@lemmy.world
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              3 months ago

              Landfills at least in the us absolutely are designed to encapsulate waste, to minimize leachate and to control runoff. The whole point is to bury it in a way that it will tend to stay buried.

              There is evidence of paper not decomposing because it doesn’t get enough oxygen or water for microbes to do their thing