All Hungarian rivers are full of microplastics

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Laura Jurecska, an environmental chemist, presented how much microplastics there are in Hungarian waters. 

A microplastic is a piece of less than 5 millimetres that is either already manufactured in this size or created by the destruction of a larger product. These contaminants are everywhere, in soil, air, and water, writes 24.hu.

Their effects are not yet known exactly; they are likely to pose a risk.

Laura Jurecska, an environmental chemist and an employee of the Department of Microbiology at the Faculty of Science of the Hungarian Eötvös LorĂ¡nd University, talked about the microplastic contamination of Hungarian waters. An international study has shown that anyone who consumes only bottled beverages feeds 90,000 microplastic particles to their body each year. Anyone who consumes only tap water consumes only 4,000 pieces of plastic per year.

Most of the microplastics are excreted in the faeces. However, 10 per cent of microplastics are absorbed in the body and can cause inflammation. In general, the larger the amount of plastic we consume, the more likely it is to be excreted from our body.

Budapest raised the level of microplastic pollution on the Danube by a fifth.

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One comment

  1. If you knew what is in the Balaton you would never swim in it or eat fish caught in it. Unless you have a death wish.

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