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Alice: Hello and welcome to 6 Minute English. I'm Alice.
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Neil: and I'm Neil. Hello.
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Alice: Hello, Neil. Have you been shopping?
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Neil: Yes, I went a bit mad with my credit card actually.
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Alice: Gosh, I can see that! But look at all those plastic bags. Why don't you use your own bags?
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Neil: You know what, I'm going to. Because they're now charging 5p per bag!
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Alice: Don't you follow the news, Neil? It's a recent government initiative
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which means a new plan for dealing with something.
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In this case, to cut the number of thin plastic bags being given away in shops.
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And the environmental impact of plastic is the subject of today's show.
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Neil: Is England the first country to charge for these bags, Alice?
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Alice: No... other countries in the UK started charging a few years ago.
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And countries around the world including Bangladesh, South Africa, China
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and Italy have actually banned them altogether.
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Neil: Interesting. But I don't throw my bags away, Alice.
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I put them under the kitchen sink.
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Alice: Are you a hoarder, Neil? That means someone who collects large amounts of stuff
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and can't throw things away.
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Neil: Maybe I am... But seriously, with the 5p charge I'm definitely going to recycle my plastic bags.
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Alice: Good. Now let me ask you today's quiz question, Neil:
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How many tonnes of plastic rubbish from the UK is being sent to China each year for recycling?
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Is it: a) 20,000? b) 200,000? or c) 2,000,000?
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Neil: Well I think it's ... a) 20,000.
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Alice: We'll find out if you're right or wrong later on.
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But first, why are plastic bags bad for the environment?
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Neil: Because they're too thin?
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And when they break all your shopping falls out? That must be it.
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Alice: No. They take hundreds of years to decompose
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or break down by natural chemical processes.
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And also people don't dispose of them properly.
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They litter our streets. They clog ─ or block ─ drains and sewers.
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They spoil the countryside and damage wildlife.
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Neil: Well that's quite a list. So what's the solution then, Alice?
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Alice: Well to either recycle or stop using plastic bags.
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But let's hear about the pharmaceutical company with another idea.
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This is BBC reporter John Maguire.
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John Maguire: At this company laboratory in North London they're testing how bags made
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with a special additive break down when exposed to sunlight, oxygen and heat.
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The technology was discovered by a British scientist in the 1970s
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and is now sold to around half the world's countries.
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In some, biodegradable bags are backed by law.
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Neil: And biodegradable means able to break down naturally in a way
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that isn't harmful to the environment.
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Alice: So adding small amounts of a chemical to the plastic
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a special additive ─ allows the plastic to break down in the open air.
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But if the technology was discovered back in the 1970s,
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why aren't these biodegradable bags being used in every country by now?
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Neil: I have no idea, Alice. Maybe they aren't as strong as non-biodegradable bags.
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I like a good strong bag, myself, you see.
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Alice: Alright. Well, just go and buy yourself some canvas bags, Neil!
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In fact, I'll get you some for your birthday.
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Neil: Thank you.
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Alice: You're very welcome. Now, moving on.
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Out of around 300 million tons of plastic produced every year,
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some goes in landfill ─ a place where our rubbish is buried under the earth
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but about 10% of plastic ends up in the sea.
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Let's listen to Biologist Dr Pennie Lindeque from Plymouth Marine Laboratory talking about this.
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Dr Pennie Lindeque: We're already finding that there's a lot of microplastics in the sea
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and that some of these microplastics are actually being ingested by the zooplankton
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that live there. We're also concerned this could end up being passed up through the food
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chain to food which is destined for human consumption so it could end up on your or my plate.
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Neil: What are microplastics, Alice?
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Alice: They're small plastic fragments less than 5mm in size.
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You find them in cosmetic products such as facial scrubs, shower gel, and toothpaste.
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Neil: And I'm guessing that ingested means 'eaten'?
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Alice: Yes, the zooplankton ─ tiny little animals in the sea
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mistake the microplastics for food and eat them.
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And because the zooplankton and humans are in the same food chain
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they're at the bottom and we're at the top... but we're still connected
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we may end up eating them and the microplastics inside them!
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Neil: That doesn't sound very tasty!
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Now a food chain, by the way, refers to a series of living things
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where each creature feeds on the one below it in the chain.
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Alice: Indeed. OK. Remember my question from earlier? I asked:
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How many tonnes of plastic rubbish from the UK is being sent to China each year for recycling?
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Is it... a) 20,000? b) 200,000? or c) 2,000,000?
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Neil: And I said a) 20,000.
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Alice: Yes but you're wrong, I'm afraid. The answer is b) 200,000 tonnes.
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And that statistic comes from the University of Cambridge in the UK.
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Neil: That's a load of rubbish! Get it ─ load of rubbish?
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Alice: Very good.
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Neil: Can we hear today's words again please?
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Alice: We certainly can. Here they are:
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initiative
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hoarder
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decompose
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clog
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biodegradable
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additive
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landfill
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microplastics
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ingested
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zooplankton
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food chain
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Neil: Well, that brings us to the end of this 6 Minute English.
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We hope you enjoyed today's environmentally-friendly programme.
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Please do join us again soon.
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Both: Bye.