the dangers of microbeads

 2014 January-February
THE DANGERS OF MICROBEADS
Leaders against plastic pollution, Marcus Eriksen and Anna Cummins ask
cosmetics companies to rethink “microbeads.”
By: Stuart Coleman
Researchers Marcus Eriksen and Anna Cummins were taking water samples from Lakes
Erie, Huron, and Superior in 2012 when they noticed something puzzling—millions of
plastic beads, each one smaller than a grain of sand.
The California couple had spent years researching the Great Pacific Garbage Patch and
studying plastic pollution in the world’s oceans. They were finding much of the same
debris in the Great Lakes—bottles, bags, straws, caps, and countless other single-use
plastics—but they were stymied by the vast amount of mysterious plastic beads in every
trawl.
After some research, Eriksen says, they realized the spherical particles were “the same
size, shape, texture, and color of the microbeads you find in consumer beauty
products”—facial scrubs, cleansers, and other common products that leave our skin clean
but also send millions of plastic particles down the drain.
The beads are so tiny that most pass right through our sewer systems and into rivers,
lakes, and oceans, where they accumulate—a single tube of Johnson & Johnson’s Clean
& Clear facial scrub can contain up to 330,000 plastic beads.
“I found more in the Great Lakes than in any sample anywhere in the world’s oceans,”
says Eriksen, co-founder with Cummins of the 5 Gyres Institute, a nonprofit dedicated to
documenting plastic pollution in the world’s five major oceanic gyres (huge swirling
currents in which debris accumulates in the North and South Pacific, the North and South
Atlantic, and the Indian Ocean—the North Pacific gyre has amassed a “garbage patch” as
big as the state of Texas).
Microbeads may be tiny, but they pose a big environmental problem, says Eriksen. The
plastic particles can leach harmful chemicals into the water. At the same time, they can
absorb toxic pollutants like PCBs, heavy metals, and oil—and when the contaminated
beads are swallowed by fish and other marine creatures, they can introduce those
chemicals into our food supply.
But the tide may be turning on microbeads. Eriksen and Cummins led an effort by 5
Gyres to persuade cosmetics companies to discontinue the use of these plastic particles.
So far, Johnson & Johnson, L’Oréal, Unilever, and Colgate-Palmolive have agreed to
phase them out by 2015, while Proctor & Gamble has said it will remove them from
products by 2017.
“They saw the writing on the wall,” Eriksen says. “Instead of fighting it with all of the
ammunition that corporations can throw at these types of campaigns and small
nonprofits, I guess they took the moral high road and said, ‘You’re right.’
What You Can Do
Want to cleanse your beauty routine of microbeads? Avoid products that include
polyethylene or polystyrene in the ingredients list. Most major cosmetics companies have
pledged to phase out the abrasive by 2015, but in the meantime, natural brands including
Burt’s Bees and St. Ives use nonpolluting ingredients like cocoa bean husks and crushed
apricot seeds for the same effect.
Originally published as "About-Face" in the January/February 2014 issue of Spirituality
& Health magazine.
Marcus Eriksen and Anna Cummins met while researching the Great Pacific Garbage
Patch and now speak out on the dangers of plastic pollution with their nonprofit, 5 Gyres.