Instead of helping to tackle the world's staggering plastic waste problem, recycling may be exacerbating a concerning environmental problem: microplastic pollution.
A recent peer-reviewed study that focused on a recycling facility in the United Kingdom suggests that anywhere between 6% to 13% of the plastic processed could end up being released into water or the air as microplastics — ubiquitous tiny particles smaller than five millimeters that have been found everywhere from Antarctic snow to inside human bodies.
"This is such a big gap that nobody's even considered, let alone actually really researched," said Erina Brown, a plastics scientist who led the research while at the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow, Scotland.
The research adds to growing concerns that recycling isn't as effective of a solution for the plastic pollution problem as many might think. Only a fraction of the plastic produced gets recycled: About 9% worldwide and about 5% to 6% in the United States, according to some recent estimates.
The study was conducted at a single plastic recycling facility, but experts say its findings shouldn't be taken lightly.
"It's a very credible study," said Judith Enck, a former senior Environmental Protection Agency official under President Barack Obama who now heads the Beyond Plastics advocacy organization. She was not involved in the research. "It's only one facility, but it raises troubling issues, and it should inspire environmental regulatory agencies to replicate the study at other plastic recycling facilities."
How does plastic recycling work?
While there are many different types of plastic, many experts say only things made out of No. 1 and 2 are really recycled effectively in the United States. At recycling facilities, plastic waste is generally sorted, cleaned, chopped up or shredded into bits, melted down and remolded.
It's unsurprising that this process could produce microplastics, Enck said. "The way plastic recycling facilities operate, there's a lot of mechanical friction and abrasion," she said.