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Choosing the environment over your laundry

Scientist have shown how fibres from your clothes are polluting the ocean, but what can you do about it?

Scientist have shown how fibres from your clothes are polluting oceans, but what can you do about it?

Eric Swanson points to a filter he installed on his clothes washing machine in Victoria B.C. to help trap small fibres that break off from textiles and end up as ocean pollution. (Eric Swanson)

As a newdad, Victoria resident Eric Swanson iscommitted to helping the planet by driving an electric vehicle, reducing waste and buyingethically-produced clothes.

But Swanson, 36,realized he could do more after discovering the pollution he was creating by doing his laundry.

Recently, hecame upon what scientists in Vancouver and other parts of the the world have known since at least 2014: that micro-fibres from textiles those measuring fivemillimetres in size or smallerare passing through washing machines, water treatment plants and into the ocean,where aquatic creaturesare eating them.

Learning thatbothered Swanson, whohas a four-month old daughter with his wife.

"I just didn't like the idea that every time I was washing my clothes, unseen pollution was entering the ocean," he said.

A zip-up sweater made of polyester fleece, which contains recycled plastic has been shown to lose up to 10 million tiny fibres during each laundry wash, according to the Vancouver Aquarium. (Chad Pawson/CBC)

When clothing such as a polyester fleece sweater for examplegets washed, some of its fibres break off. Scientists at the Vancouver Aquarium say up to 10 million fibres from that one sweater canpass through the washing machine and beyond.

The scientists say 30 billion of the fibrespass through one water treatment plant in Vancouver alone each year and into the ocean.

Swanson decided to do something about the problem beyond wearing natural fibres like organic cotton or wool.

First, he bought a bag made by a German company that he could put certain clothing items in during a wash cycle to prevent fibres from breaking off and floating free.Recently he installed a special filter on his washing machine to capturefibres.

Micro fibres, which scientists are studying at the Vancouver Aquarium to determine how they end up in the ocean. (Ocean Wise)

Still, he admits he is an outlier when it comes to doing something about micro-fibre pollution from clothing.

"Climate change is the biggest thing I talk about with a lot of my friends," he said, "I don't know many others that this is top of mind for them."

'Certainly alarming'

Ocean pollution scientist Peter Ross, who works at the Vancouver Aquarium, hopes more people will take action around the issue.

"We can virtually say with confidence that every species in the ocean is eating plastic," Rosssaid.

"It's certainly alarming, but a lot of questions remain about what this means for aquatic life and where these things are coming from."

Ross is conducting studies with garment manufacturers and retailers such asPatagonia, Arc'teryx, and MECto try in figure out what type of fabrics breakdown and shed fibres the most. Results are expected by this winter.

Micro fibres found in ocean water seen here under magnification. (Ocean Wise)

In the meantime, Ross doesn't want people avoiding certain clothes.For example, he still wears polyester fleece sweaters, but less than in the past, and hetries not to wash them often.

At the University of Alberta, Rachel MacQueen, a professor of human ecology,studies textiles and odour.

MacQueen made headlines with a student who wore the same pair of denim jeans for 15 months without washing them. They discovered the level of bacteria in the jeans was more or less the same after wearing them for two weeks.

Washing less

She says reducing the frequency of washing can be safe for most people and helps preserve clothes like jeans.

But synthetic fibres, such as polyester, end up smelling more than cotton or wool because of the way they repel water.

"With natural fibres we don't see the same quality of odour orthe same build up of odour," she said.

She and Ross say thatother polyester garments, such as tightly woven athletic shirts, don't appear to break down as readily as fleece material when washed.