Lachine environmental group wants to reduce microplastics entering our waters - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 03:37 AM | Calgary | 6.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Lachine environmental group wants to reduce microplastics entering our waters

Microplastics from clothing enter the environment in run off from washing machines. An environmental group in Lachine hopes filters on laundry equipment can reduce that phenomenon, and help scientists learn more about microfibres.

Scientists estimate textiles make up 35% of the primary microplastic pollution in oceans

Luisa Novara, the project manager for waste management at GRAME, launched a citizen-led research project to reduce microplastics from entering waterways. (Dave St-Amant/CBC)

Textiles are the largest known source of primary microplastic pollution in the world's oceans making up around 35 percent of the microplasticthat is released intothe waters.

Every time you wash your clothes, tiny fibres are released into the waste water. These fibres then travel into lakes, oceans and marine organisms.

And while most of it becomes fragmented from wastewater treatments, a large volume still escapesand the long term effects of that are still largely unknown.

"All this plastic that is present in the clothes we wear, that we buy, and we wash and then throw away we think we are really getting rid of it,"saidLuisa Novara, project manager in waste management at Groupe de recommandations et d'actions pour un meilleur environnement(GRAME).

"The thing is, we are not getting rid of it and it comes back to us," she said.

"It enters the food chain and it enters the food we eat, the water we drink, and it comes right back to us and in this invisible form."

So the Lachine non-profit environmental organization launched a citizen-led research project.

About 30 residents were asked to install a microplastic filtration device onto their washing machines to capturemicroplastics from the laundry before the water is released into the sewage systems.

The filtration device attached to the washing machine can filter about 87-99 per cent of microfibres from the source, before they are sent to the sewage systems, says Catherine Houbart, executive director of GRAME. (Dave St-Amant/CBC)

Citizen-led research project to study microfibres

Catherine Houbart, the executive director of GRAME, says for sixmonths participants are being asked to collect the lint from the filter, as well as track the intensity of the wash cycle, and the water temperature.

Then, participants will send the dried materials they collect from the filters to a lab at PolytechniqueMontralengineering school.

The non-profit organization has also partnered with a number of municipalities to offer subsidies to residents who install a filter.

Dominique Claveau-Mallet is a professor in wastewater management at Polytechnique Montral and is responsible for analyzing the material collected from the filters. (Dave St-Amant/CBC)

The contents of the filters may help scientists learn more about this kind of pollution.

Dominique Claveau-Mallet, a professor in wastewater management at Polytechnique Montral, collects and studies the materials.

"My job [is to] quantify the mass of plastic grabbed in this type of filtration," saidClaveau-Mallet.

"We want to know how much plastic is released and what's the composition: size, type and shape," she said.

Claveau-Mallet says the study of microfibre pollution is relatively new, and while there doesn't seem to be acute toxicity,there remains work to be done onthe long-term effects of microplastics on the environment and food chain.

The goal, she says, is to develop protocols to measure microplastics for the future. As well as help people understand the impact the clothes they buy and wear can have on the environment, and to highlight that there is too much plastic in our lives.

Catherine Houbart, the executive director of GRAME, holding a ball of lint-like material she collected from her filtration device. (Dave St-Amant/CBC)

Lobbying to make laundry filters mandatory

The Lachine environmental groupis hoping to convince the province to make these filters mandatory in all new laundry machines, in an effort to reduce the amount of microplastics entering our streams, lakes, and oceans.

It also wants tomake the filters more affordable and manageable.

Houbart points to France as an example, where as of 2025, all new washing machines must have a filter installed to catch plastic microfibres.

Add some good to your morning and evening.

The environment is changing. This newsletter is your weekly guide to what were doing about it.

...

The next issue of What on Earth will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in theSubscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.