Companies race to stem flood of microplastic fibres into the oceans

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New products range from washing machine filters and balls to fabrics made from kelp and orange peel

actually being worse than standard cycles. An estimated 68m loads of washing are done every week in the UK.samples were fibres. “Our data clearly show that microplastics are pervasive in the ocean and that, surprisingly, the major component is microfibres,” said Aaron Beck, at the Geomar Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research in Kiel, Germany.in November, said the system caught up to 90% of synthetic fibres released during wash cycles.

Microplastic pollution is a rising scourge in the Arctic as well as rivers and oceans around the world.A system that can be retrofitted to existing washing machines and does not need replacement cartridges has been created by the British company Matter, and was recently awarded £150,000 from the British Design Fund. The device,, is connected between the outflow pipe and the drain and traps the fibres in a container that is emptied every 20 washes.

The company’s founder, Adam Root, a former Dyson engineer and keen scuba diver, said the idea had started with a £250 grant from the Prince’s Trust. “I used it to take apart a washing machine and that’s when I had my ‘eureka’ moment.”

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