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00:00I asked you for the last session
00:03You sum up your relationship with her in one word.
00:08Did you know how to do that?
00:09The doctor was very difficult.
00:11I wish I could find a single word to describe our relationship.
00:13But if there is a word
00:15It would be that it was a plastic relationship
00:19Do you really believe it's cheap?
00:21No, it's not cheap.
00:23But let's leave aside the fact that it was easy to break.
00:26But be aware that plastic is easily broken.
00:28It is not hard enough to break
00:30But it is very soft
00:32I mean, I think she was weak.
00:34She can't handle the pressure
00:36But Mahmoud, plastic can withstand pressure.
00:38Doctor, you understand what I mean.
00:40plastic hanger
00:42It means it decomposes quickly
00:44On the contrary, sir
00:47The plastic problem
00:48It's solved by stretching
00:49I don't mean real plastic.
00:51I meant a plastic hanger
00:54Relationship to apostasy
00:56It has no heat
00:58I'm telling you, if the plastic is cut
01:00Endure the heat
01:01I swear to God I'll throw myself out of the window
01:02I'm using a linguistic analogy.
01:04My problem is much bigger than the plastic problem.
01:06honestly
01:08Plastic is very environmentally damaging
01:10And it's destroying the planet.
01:11It's impossible for your problem to be bigger
01:12The plastic problem
01:13Do you not understand?
01:14You are not a psychiatrist
01:15And it's so cold
01:16I'm not cold
01:18I'm Maren
01:19yeah
01:20seriously
01:20You are Maren
01:21Maren coldly
01:23And anything that is formed in it
01:25costume worker
01:29Not for any comparison
01:31I don't know how to describe you
01:34What do you say?
01:35Your problem is bigger than your shoes.
01:37I don't want to hear any more from you.
01:39Believe
01:40I can't stand you at all.
01:41I am mentally healthy.
01:43Like iron
01:43Nothing happens to them
01:56Dear viewers, peace and blessings be upon you.
01:57Welcome to a new episode of Barmija Al-Dahiyya
01:59My dear beautiful viewer, let me take you by the hand.
02:01And we go to the year 1997
02:02During Captain Charles Moore's crunch
02:04From Honolulu to California
02:06After he participated in the seven boats that we
02:07The truth is, Captain Charles tried to take a cat's shorts
02:10His usual route affects
02:11The route is unique because it passes through a remote part of the Pacific Ocean.
02:15This road
02:15The fishermen abandoned it because it didn't have enough rain for the sky.
02:18Therefore, they are on this long journey
02:20There won't be any fish to light up
02:22And sailors don't prefer this route either.
02:23Because the winds there are few
02:25Therefore, the ship's sail is not moving in the proper way.
02:28Charles Moore predicted that he would pass through a deserted area.
02:31There's nothing in it, no people, nothing at all.
02:33A clean, pristine area with no crowds
02:35He told me that it was a completely different surprise from what he expected.
02:38During his voyage in the region
02:39Everything he looked around at was only one thing he could see.
02:42plastic
02:42We want scenes before your academy on 4 meters, and he told him it was a small piece.
02:45Charles Moore says he preferred to sail for a whole week at sea
02:48Every time he looks at the water, all he sees is plastic everywhere.
02:50It's like he's floating in a plastic soup.
02:52More will tell what he saw on a tablet named Curtus Epsmeier
02:55This is one of the most famous water pumps in the area.
02:56His main specialization
02:58Debris floating on the water's surface
03:00God bless Abu Ahmed, he specializes in surface litter.
03:02It's something similar, really, my dear.
03:04Curtus will be the first person to name this area
03:07By its name as it is known to this day
03:08The Great Pacific Garbage Patch
03:10The Great Pacific Garbage Patch
03:13Curtis was very precise when he said it was very big.
03:15Dear dear, the size of the bud is normal, twice the size of the state of Texas.
03:18This makes it the largest accumulation of plastic in the oceans.
03:21But she is not the only one
03:23We have four other similar packages, my dear.
03:25One in the Pacific Ocean too
03:26And two in the Atlantic Ocean
03:27One in the Indian Ocean
03:28If you think the problem is those few plastic bottles floating on the surface of the water
03:32So let me tell you that what's on this face
03:34Nothing compares to the plastic piled up at the bottom
03:37And what's available to me is everywhere in the world.
03:38From the time of its invention until this moment
03:40So you're saying, my dear, that we succeeded in lining
03:43Plastic water body bottoms
03:45We filled every flat water bottom with plastic
03:47By the phenomenon of the Most Merciful hearing of the deepest religion
03:50It is derived from the word "permanent," which is another name for plastic.
03:53Qalish ya Barhamd, I have a question and a small point regarding what you are saying.
03:56You, Abu Hamid, are saying that plastic has accumulated from its invention until today.
03:59It's not plastic, I mean...
04:01It decomposes; not everything in this world is fleeting and will eventually disappear.
04:04Honestly, my dear, I wish your situation was like this, then no one would be defeated.
04:06No one is happy with the cardboard shalmon
04:07Let me surprise you and tell you that plastic is a material with a special curse.
04:10By allowing it to accumulate over decades and sometimes centuries
04:14Without it being resolved, even if it is surrounded by walls
04:16This has a very simple scientific reason.
04:17Chemical coercion between carbon atoms
04:19The particles present in plastic are very stable and difficult to break.
04:23Especially in regular natural currencies
04:25Let me also tell you that many types of plastic are not made from materials found naturally in the environment.
04:29It facilitates the encounter of microbes or natural enzymes capable of efficiently breaking them down.
04:34And in deep waters, like the enclosures, for example
04:35The decomposition process itself is much more efficient.
04:38Be careful, we're deep underground.
04:40They understand that we have neither light nor oxygen.
04:42Which of course represent a necessity in the decomposition process
04:44This means that plastic might need between 20 and 500 years
04:48So that it can be completely decomposed
04:49Mohammed, when I get angry, what I know is that if you can't handle acidity, don't eat garlic.
04:53And whoever summons the jinn cannot bear the pain of not summoning them.
04:55And when it remains a sticky substance like that, the genie sticks
04:58Man brings himself to invent it from the very beginning.
05:00The truth is, Azzedine, when I took you by the hand in 1997, I was deceiving you.
05:03Hello Mohamed, I loved 97
05:05Azin, this isn't a regular group, it's a year.
05:07Because the story of plastic started very early
05:09I started the story for you, but you're throwing things into the water.
05:12But plastic has other aspects that we don't know about.
05:15Our story will begin with plastic as the good hero.
05:18He is neither evil nor a curse, and the world is not required to get rid of him.
05:22Plastic was a magical material that solved problems you could imagine.
05:25The first of these were environmental problems.
05:27Yes, this is the first sale from my father's environmental problems.
05:29my dear
05:30And didn't we say I'm Tris?
05:31Tris
05:32I'll get you a bicycle that doesn't take from the scrap metal.
05:33If I asked you about the specifications of the material that can be used to make anything
05:36You will usually need almost magical materials.
05:38For example, it will need to be sturdy.
05:40I'll keep talking to you for a long time
05:41A cohesive material, but not very solid.
05:43It's flexible, but not very soft.
05:45You can shape it however you want
05:47Back in the day, my dear, the materials were much stranger than this.
05:49They were called natural polymers
05:51Polymers are simply giant reagents.
05:53Each one is made up of repeating units called monomers
05:56Polymers are made by monomers
05:58Oh Abu Hamid, you've brought me back from organic chemistry!
06:00He was telling you to buy me all the sodium sulfate from 96 octane gasoline.
06:03He doesn't even exist in the national identity.
06:05My dear, please calm down, let's get back to the polymers.
06:07Pay close attention, and God willing, the matter will be simple.
06:09Polymers are naturally occurring everywhere
06:11Religion is like what's in our bodies, for example.
06:13All natural polymers
06:14Ivory, for example, is a natural polymer.
06:16Proteins and sugars are natural polymers
06:18And man, as I told you, from the beginning of history
06:20When looking for a material that is easy to shape
06:22It is both flexible and rigid at the same time.
06:23He relied on natural polymers in the manufacture of his tools.
06:26For example, animal bones, ivory, shells, wood, and rubber
06:30Okay, God is great, Abu Hamad, we have natural polymers to play with
06:33The problem, my dear, is that many natural polymers
06:35Seasonal or rare
06:37Also, polymers sometimes require prolonged leaching.
06:40So you can press it to wake her up
06:41Take your time, my dear, for man is easily swayed by foreign words.
06:43Also, polymers in many cases
06:45It is susceptible to breakage, damage, and corrosion.
06:47Despite all of its drawbacks, DeFast's human consumption of natural polymers
06:51Life was as sweet as a knife.
06:53So, how far does the program go, my dear?
06:55Oh Abu Hamad, the industrial melting
06:57With the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century
07:00Mass production began
07:02This means more and more demand for polymers that continue to be used in industry.
07:07At that time, my dear, we still had a middle class that was just starting out.
07:10She tries to imitate the upper classes and appear more refined than the poor classes.
07:13To confirm her position to those above and below her
07:16This is where the ostentatious customs and trends emerged.
07:18I need a very large quantity of polymers.
07:20Polymers such as ivory, amber, and others
07:22Most of these polymers came from colonies
07:25This is because the colonizer at that time was at the height of his power.
07:28We were, my dear, in the midst of the Sizu
07:29Any empire wants anything from the world
07:30You see any poor country and you take it as a colony.
07:32Four days, three nights
07:33She gets back all the resources she wants.
07:35In his book, Plastic on Water, this
07:36Silvy and Greco say that the first revolutions
07:38For the indigenous inhabitants of the colonies, most of them
07:41Against the colonizer's plundering of raw materials
07:42Polymers and forest wood
07:44This is in addition to killing the perpetrators for the ivory.
07:46Ivory used by humans of the First World
07:49To make a lot of promotional items
07:51Costumes of female adultery and piano
07:53And most importantly, my dear, it's for you.
07:55And for our friends and billiards
07:57Picor billiards, I deal in ivory
07:58At that time, but it's just human habit.
08:00I was surprised by resources like ivory.
08:02Limited and therefore depleted over time
08:05The material, like ivory, became astronomical.
08:06Here, people began to wonder if the polymers that
08:08Is it possible to handle this industrially?
08:10This question is about a wedding; expect that it won't start in the lab.
08:13But he sees that he will start from the hall
08:15Billiards and from the highest class
08:16Intermediate polymer layers are needed
08:18The activities of the peripheral middle classes are
08:20My dear, you started all these problems
08:22One of the billiard ball manufacturers will organize
08:24Competition of the year 1863
08:26With a prize worth $10,000
08:28Pay attention, my dear, this is from about 170 years ago.
08:30So you know where it gets inflated and stuff
08:32This amount will be given to the person who can invent a new material.
08:35It replaces ivory in billiard balls
08:37The winner of the competition will be someone named John Weasley
08:39The one who invented it in 1878
08:40Celluloid material is not just a condition
08:42The problem of billiards is where to turn
08:44Companies are viewing this as a brilliant idea, folks.
08:46In a material that can replace
08:48Natural fresh polymers
08:50Something like ivory, for example, and at the same time
08:52Cheap and damage resistant
08:54Oh, especially if I told them
08:57With materials like wood and glass
08:58Those who provide them are also intermittent.
09:00And the limited number of investors found it
09:02A gift from heaven, they used it in many sectors.
09:04From the first dentistry to manufacturing
09:06In his book, *A Cultural History of American Plastics*
09:09Jeffrey Nickel describes this transformation
09:11It is a democratically opened market for the middle class.
09:14But the path to industrial polymers
09:16He will absolutely not stop at this attempt.
09:18Because at the time the middle class
09:20I found a solution for its consumption
09:21The upper layer looked at the celluloid
09:22It is a counterfeit product. Second review.
09:24His goal is to imitate nature and its materials.
09:27Without any real beauty or authenticity
09:30Here, attempts will begin to improve semi-synthetic polymers based on a mixture.
09:36From natural and manufactured materials
09:38For example, the attempts of someone named Charles Goodyear
09:40This man tried to mix natural rubber with sulfur
09:43But he was not the creator of the first fully synthetic polymers.
09:46The first 100% synthetic polymers appeared in 1907.
09:50With the establishment of the parents
09:51And it also appeared as a solution to the problem
09:52We are a group that has a natural need for it.
09:54But its presence on the planet, as we discovered, means that its duration is limited.
09:57The only material that was used for electrical insulation
10:00In the manufacture of wires and electrical installations
10:01Her name was Angelica Gum
10:03It came specifically from the secretions of the Keralaca insects.
10:07He's one of those guys, and anyone who sees something like that
10:09We take his secretions
10:12As a result of increased demand for this insulating material
10:15The price of the material has skyrocketed.
10:17This is the Belgian Leo Becklin
10:19It makes an electrical insulator
10:20Through formaldehyde and phenol
10:23The one coming from the oil refineries
10:24After many attempts, he finally succeeded in inventing
10:26Bakelite material
10:28My dear, the first type of plastic that is entirely industrially produced
10:31Finally, my dear, we have synthetic polymers.
10:34Polymers capable of lasting longer than natural ones
10:36And easier to fold and shape
10:38And less prone to damage
10:39Besides, of course, it's available.
10:41Of course, these synthetic polymers have started to spread into everything.
10:44Combs, buttons, boxes, and pens
10:47This is in addition to household appliances such as radios.
10:49With the spread of automobiles and the increased demand for oil refining
10:52Humans suddenly discovered this
10:54But this, this, this, this, this, this
10:55This is clearly a byproduct of the petroleum refining process.
10:58An inert material is useful in the plastics industry.
11:00The material had almost no uses except in court lamps.
11:04God
11:04This, my friend, will forever link the plastics industry to petroleum derivatives.
11:09To give birth to the Flushing and the 1930s, a new industrial sector emerged: petrochemicals.
11:13Which is simple, my dear, you will discover that all petrochemical tycoons now
11:17ExxonMobil and Totten were born during this period
11:20For example, when we were able to extract ethylene gas from petroleum derivatives
11:23What do we make from it? Polyethylene
11:25Which we use in packaging and filling
11:27We continued to take propylene and make polypropylene from it.
11:30Hey Abu Ahmad? The mullet
11:31You're absolutely right.
11:32Polypropylene
11:34Polypropylene is a material used in food preservation.
11:36Here I tell you, my dear, that the person who breached this material
11:39Winning the Nobel Prize
11:40Italian Giulio Natta
11:41The matter is simply ongoing.
11:42And with the second blind war, another leap in the uses of plastic began.
11:45To serve as an alternative to one of the oldest and most important commodities of the ancient world
11:50silk
11:51As usual, the topic started with its simplest details.
11:53Like me, Abu Ahmed
11:54Like my dear, women's sherbet
11:56A topic that began with women's sherbet
11:581940
11:59American women
12:01They used to use a sherbet made of silk.
12:03Sherbet imported from Japan
12:05But because of the second blind war
12:06Japan participated in it
12:07And the Americans were against the Japanese just because they knew.
12:09The important thing, my dear, was that it was a major flaw.
12:11If we have wars and nuclear bombs between us
12:13Armed conflicts
12:15And we're still exchanging silk women's sherbet
12:18Many public businesses have stopped operating like this.
12:20Their time is DuPont Petrochemicals
12:22Used in the manufacture of military parachutes
12:24A material that I expected might be an alternative
12:27About natural silk
12:28This material, my dear, is
12:30Mylon, May 15, 1940
12:31Following the first part of the nylon stockings in America
12:35And it's only 4 days, my dear.
12:36The topic became a ring
12:37And my followers, my dear, are 4 million sharm
12:40Silvio Greco in his book
12:41Plastic is considered the material that has most influenced our lives.
12:44Especially after the second labor war
12:46When it began to spread gradually
12:47Plastic penetration and infiltration
12:49It began to replace all other materials
12:52Please hold on, my dear
12:54Oh, how we are doing near Yarzo
12:55This is the last thing I have to do with it.
12:56I am a flexible material, but I am also a solid.
12:58I'm with you and I'll complain however you want, I'm just a poor guy
13:00Please, my dear, the matter is proceeding as it should.
13:01Plastic production up to 1970
13:04What's up?
13:05Steel production
13:06Huh? Steel
13:07Plastic, Abu Hamad
13:09Oh Ali Korn Al-Balmart, I swear to God
13:11Dear plastic, go ahead
13:12And nobody can stop it
13:13And up to this moment, my dear
13:14We are the uncles of companies
13:15She found a magical substance
13:16A material capable of making anything
13:18So far, my dear, things are going well.
13:20We had a problem, and thank God the companies
13:22I found a magic solution to these problems
13:24We now have a super material that can make anything
13:27Without it, we will not destroy the environment.
13:28We don't cut down forests
13:29We don't believe elephants
13:30To get the urgent results from it
13:31Not to get snooker
13:32We receive vial
13:33If you, my dear, worked hard in our current time
13:35You'll find plastic isn't just available.
13:36In the image of bags and bottles
13:38no
13:38This is now everywhere.
13:39Ceilings and computers
13:41Most household appliances
13:43You will also find it inside her body
13:44In artificial joints
13:45Industrial valves
13:46And the majority of coronary arteries
13:48All of this, my dear, is for disease or plastic.
13:50But it can happen during the same period as plastic production.
13:52According to some sources, you can
13:53It was in the Tartines of the last century
13:55Voices will appear saying
13:56Guys, there's a problem.
13:58Oh God, protect us, oh good people, oh Abu Habid
13:59First incident occurred
14:01It was approximately 1931
14:03When a shark
14:05Her movement is paralyzed
14:06Because of a car tire
14:07shark
14:08May God protect you, my dear ones.
14:08Arabic tire rack
14:10Haba
14:11I didn't know what was forbidden
14:11When we entered the sixties
14:13Let's see them, whales
14:14dead seabirds
14:15Due to swallowing plastic waste
14:17in the beginning
14:18Everyone is towards the job
14:19And say, "O people!"
14:20These are stupid animals
14:21And so on
14:21The oceans are vast
14:22And it can accommodate our garbage
14:24To an end
14:25And not because of a few backward animals
14:26We're going to change our Polus.
14:27And we build our Emirates
14:28Therefore
14:29It was a decision
14:30We use the oceans
14:31As a token
14:31So that we can put our waste into it
14:33But
14:34With population increase
14:35Increased consumption
14:36And a cat analyzed
14:37plastic waste
14:38The problem appeared
14:39And we suddenly discovered
14:40Even the oceans
14:41It has limits
14:42You won't be able to listen to everything.
14:44That's why
14:44Everyone will be surprised.
14:45After decades
14:46This is the back of the giant spot
14:48Remember what we started the episode with?
14:49And she started telling us
14:50We are in a real catastrophe
14:52If he came to us, my dear
14:52This spot in the ocean
14:54We will find it a disastrous gathering
14:55Marine life was driven out
14:56In the specific region
14:57But in the rest of the vast ocean
14:59Malin the creatures are forced
15:00Plastic was confronted as a deadly trap
15:01swallow the bags
15:02And she remembers it as Angel Bahr
15:04Eat plastic bottles
15:05She thought they were mollusks
15:06It enters its sludge
15:07For materials that are either toxic
15:08Either materials that have no nutritional value
15:10So, the man got bored for nothing.
15:11And the sound of food is obtained
15:13That's beside the point, of course.
15:13The net made of plastic
15:15Or the ghost net
15:16We call this
15:17Aquatic biologists now
15:18Because it's a type of net
15:19He cannot hear it
15:20And it will be durable
15:21It is easy to remove the movement of the creatures
15:23For example, weapons in the navy
15:24Even these creatures
15:35It feeds on it
15:35Plastic is not just a marine disaster
15:37In the former Palmyra
15:39This can also be dredged up.
15:40And the floods take him away
15:42For example
15:432011 Tsunami
15:44And maybe
15:45Plastic that is transferred from the second place
15:46Whether it remained due to regular seaplanes
15:48or natural disasters
15:49My monkey has many bells on it.
15:52And sometimes
15:53Sometimes small things like a cat and a mouse
15:54Here, Wakhid forms the lineup. Hello Bella.
15:56And it transfers it to a new, environmentally balanced vaccine.
15:59Congratulations!
16:00You're doing an excellent job of destroying the environment.
16:02Aashi
16:02Imagine if the oven reached a place where there were no natural enemies.
16:05They multiplied like crazy
16:06Or I arrived at Jarseen Jay from another place
16:08We don't usually encounter them in our environment.
16:10Therefore, we have no immunity against back pain.
16:12Maybe, my dear, that's what they're telling you
16:13It shows complete fires that occur on the seabed
16:16Neither you as a human being nor the companies are aware of its existence.
16:18Let me tell you something, and surprise you, my dear, that if I analyzed your body right now
16:21You will find plastic in it
16:22What, am I inside plastic?
16:24Based on that, the current people are fantastic and all that.
16:26Ha ha ha ha
16:26You'd better be careful, the market and sales are collapsing
16:29But if I analyzed your body right now, I'm sure I'd find plastic in it.
16:32In a 2018 study conducted in Austria, Azizi collected stool samples
16:36From more than eight volunteers in more than one country
16:38And look for plastic at these times
16:40And in these cases, very small types of plastic were found.
16:43It's called microplastics
16:45Lazy, let me tell you, beware of her, not the sample.
16:46According to researchers, the European man
16:48He ingests approximately 11,000 microplastic particles per year.
16:53But what if you're American and regularly drink from plastic bottles?
16:56Your body will contain 130,000 microplastic particles annually.
17:00In comparison, there are only 4,000 molecules if you drink tap water.
17:03If you are an American citizen
17:04You know, my dear, this is perfect.
17:06Even more dangerous are the particles smaller than microplastics.
17:10You know very well that after the microbiology, sleep comes.
17:11We are dangerous plastics because of our smaller size.
17:14It can penetrate cell membranes and cause dangerous reactions or damage to the body.
17:18My dear, you don't need to walk across the Pacific Ocean.
17:20To find a spot full of plastic
17:23The plastic one is ready for you; this is your fish plate.
17:25The fish ate plastic and we replenished it with a plastic net.
17:28And if he asked for it at home, the remaining spoon might be plastic.
17:30Let me tell you, it's 55% of marine animals
17:33Those that have commercial importance, such as sardines, herring, mackerel, and sardines.
17:36The menu item "Taqa Taqa" was previously contaminated with nano-plastics.
17:39Unfortunately, my dear, despite the existing commitments
17:41Link between plastic and developing certain types of cancer or glandular disorders
17:45The effect of microplastics and nanoplastics that reach our bodies
17:48It hasn't received enough study yet.
17:51A study that allows us to understand its impact in more detail
17:54Enough, Abu Hamad, if I eat fish I'll stop.
17:55Well, sir, you've given up fish, but you certainly can't give up salt.
17:58Where does a large part of the salt we consume come from, my dear?
18:11Dear, we are surrounded by plastic.
18:13Hamad didn't say there was anything he didn't understand.
18:14We are now faced with companies that have come up with a magical invention.
18:18They used it extensively, but they ignored the flaw inherent in it.
18:21It takes years and years for it to decompose.
18:24So why are we manufacturing new plastics?
18:26Instead, we could recycle and reuse it.
18:29We take the empty base and fill it in again.
18:31A very nice idea, my dear, excellent!
18:32Let me tell you that there's an activist study from 2018 in the journal Science Advances.
18:36The total volume of plastic up to 2018
18:38It reached 8.3 billion tons
18:42Do you know, my dear, how many tons have been recycled or recycled?
18:45Only 9% of it is recycled after its first use.
18:48Only 1% of it is recycled.
18:51And 12% were exposed to movement
18:52While 6.3 billion tons means that about 79% of it accumulates in landfills
18:59Or it's like that in nature
19:00This is a very important piece of information: in most cases, the cost of producing new plastic is cheaper than recycling it.
19:08And also easier as a process
19:09This makes most companies find it easier to dispose of it instead of recycling it.
19:13According to a 12-year study from 2021 entitled
19:15Singleus plastic or single-use plastic
19:19According to this study, these are the most harmful and widespread types of plastic on the planet.
19:23Those responsible for 90% of its production, my dear, and listen, there are 100 companies, numbered.
19:27Most of the companies, dear customers, are petrochemical companies.
19:30For example, Exxon or the Chinese company Sinopec
19:32So, my dear, what if thousands and thousands of people stopped using plastic?
19:35These are just individual solutions that are respected
19:38Effort and will are respected.
19:39But it won't be impactful enough.
19:41Because these companies will produce weaker products.
19:43And this, my dear, is not my statement.
19:44I'm just like I told you, a know-it-all.
19:46And after the increase in fuel prices, skateboarding remained popular.
19:49Little by little it will turn into a knowledge hub
19:51You're the one who should see the knowledge, I hate it.
19:53In his book, My Dear Plastic on the Table
19:56Silvio Greco says that we are in the period from 2008 to 2020
19:59We produced a text on plastic production.
20:00What we produced from 1050 to 2020 as well
20:03That means, my dear, in 12 years
20:05We produced half of what we produced in 70 years
20:07Even with production exceeding our population growth
20:09And also our consumption
20:10And if we continue with a sad average
20:12The expected volume of accumulated plastic
20:14Whether in waste collection centers or in the environment in general
20:16It will reach 12 billion tons by 2050
20:19And then the weight of the plastic in the sea will be
20:21Even heavier than the fish itself, imagine
20:23Reducing production, in Silvio Greco's opinion
20:25It is the first and most effective strategy
20:27Because recycling plastic is not a complex process
20:30This is because every type of plastic
20:32Which is a special recycling process
20:33The subject is expensive
20:34In many places, this recycling process takes place.
20:36It produces products of a certain quality.
20:38Or a cream made from chemicals
20:40Health-boosting
20:41It's more of a soft, absorbent material than plastic, too.
20:42What is this?
20:43The companies, my dear Qadi, are telling you, guys
20:45The problem is with the Endoser, I swear.
20:47I produce plastic
20:48But the last user is the one who takes and discards
20:51He's the one who deals with the problem
20:52Not me
20:52According to some of these companies
20:54The problem is caused by individuals.
20:56Or governments that don't know how to deal with waste.
20:59This is in addition, of course, to your handling of scientific data.
21:01Those who are talking about the capabilities of plastic in its entirety
21:03Silvio Greco would consider this a misleading response.
21:05He proposes a policy of producer responsibility.
21:08This means the producer assumes responsibility for the entire product lifecycle.
21:12Therefore, the responsibility lies with the consumer to withdraw the product from the market after consumption.
21:16Recycle, process, or dispose of it
21:19Producers or manufacturers can pay a DRIP fee.
21:21Based on the quantity of packaging they produce each year
21:24These drives are directed towards the waste recycling process.
21:27To reach the level of the circular economy of Greco
21:29The percentage of waste in it under ideal conditions is closer to the grade
21:32The problem, my dear, lies specifically in this word.
21:33It is the phrase "ideal conditions"
21:35These are solutions needed for the ideal
21:37Companies, my dear, are not driven by ideals.
21:39There are share holders
21:40They want to know how much the stock rose and how much it fell.
21:43These are profit-driven entities that only move for one thing every day.
21:45Which will affect her
21:46Profit
21:47Okay, I, Abu Hamad, also won't move unless there's one thing that affected me.
21:49And profit too
21:50Am I with them? They tell me I'm not with them.
21:52What am I carrying in the matter of the stomach that would frighten me?
21:54He bit my heart and he bit my bread
21:56But don't go near the stabe
21:57It's all about the money.
21:58Here, let me explain to you that the global economy
22:00It suffers an annual loss of approximately $19 billion.
22:03As a cost of plastic waste in the environment
22:06The cost of plastic waste instead of recycling has reached $13 billion annually.
22:10The cost of aid, even if borne by governments
22:13Governments also get it from a security perspective.
22:14From taxes
22:15Taxes are borne by ordinary people.
22:17That's you and me
22:18And here the harm reached the most important link in corporate economics
22:20consumer
22:21The consumer who decided at the last minute not to do business with a company because of the plastic
22:25This company will suffer losses in the long run
22:27It might destroy it in the end
22:36Bed and opposition from consumers against the use of plastic
22:39In the same year, a group of environmental activists will occupy a nasturist factory in the Philippines.
22:42They will demand that the company reduce its so-called plastic footprint.
22:46This means increasing the amount of plastic you produce and consume.
22:49As a result, the company pledged that 100% of its packaging would be recyclable by 2025.
22:54In 2019, a movement called Break Free From Plastic will emerge.
22:58A report will consider Coca-Cola the world's biggest contributor to plastic pollution for two consecutive years.
23:03This created a strong reaction among consumers.
23:05And the company pledged that by 2030
23:0825% of their drinks will be made into money-back-refundable containers.
23:13Let's understand it, my dear, from an example like this.
23:14Companies can undergo a complete 180-degree transformation.
23:16Not necessarily because of the environment, or because of the turtles, or because of anything else.
23:19But because there is now public pressure that threatens their profitability in the future
23:23So they began to take pro-environment measures
23:26Ultimately, my friend, in the future we will be faced with two types of companies.
23:30The type of person who looks for quick financial gain and greed
23:32It's easier for him to create new plastic.
23:34Instead of recycling it and reducing its production
23:36Another type, I see it a little further away.
23:37Either he knows that the continuation of this situation will threaten his business in the first place
23:49Or I didn't do that, and simply because of the plastic production materials
23:52It could destroy the environment itself and the consumers themselves.
23:54The manufacturers aren't selling it to anyone right now.
23:56Countries of the two main market elements
23:58The environment from which we will obtain and through which we will transport resources
24:00And the human being, or what is known as the customer
24:02Also, the change in consumer behavior
24:04It's quite possible that this could lead to more medical studies.
24:06The impact of plastic within and around us is clearly evident.
24:09And his haircut with phrases like "cancer" and others
24:11And this, my dear, will destroy the foundations of these companies.
24:13Regarding the lack of scientific information or the inaccuracy of what we have received about plastic
24:17My dear, we might be trying to be fair to a perfect moment that is difficult to achieve.
24:19But it's consistent with the plastic story I told you.
24:22The magical invention that companies originally created
24:24After resources dwindled and the environment suffered
24:26Here, with the same flexibility, we can be sure that we have reached a similar moment.
24:30Plastic has become the very curse threatening the environment, after once being the magic solution that was supposed to solve all its problems.
24:34This is where companies can find alternative solutions to plastic.
24:37In order to maintain its profitability
24:38Most importantly, it maintains a consumer base that trusts it.
24:41And its effect on his health
24:43That's all.
24:43Finally, and not just finally, I'm looking forward to seeing the previous cases.
24:45You'll see the upcoming cases; check the sources.
24:46If we're on YouTube, we should subscribe to the channel.
24:48Please allow me, my dear sister, to say that I love her very much.
24:50I won't love again, yes, not again. My heart is plastic.
24:53His origin is selfish
24:54Ah, Azani
24:55And it turned out to be a steak
24:56Take my joy, my tenderness, and my world.
24:58I'll love my friend and go out for a steak.
25:01And it turned out to be a steak
25:02Oh, you're a traitor and a show-off.
25:05Everyone who cheated on me
25:06Everyone who cheated on me
25:08Likes works
25:09Likes works
25:10Likes works
25:11Subscribe to the channel!
25:13Look at the sources and books

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