
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The story of how the search for a material to replace ivory changed our lives forever. In the 19th century a billiard ball company placed an advert in a newspaper offering $10,000 to anyone who could come up with a substitute for ivory. There was growing concern that companies were hunting elephants into extinction so they could use their ivory for billiard balls, buttons and umbrella handles. The story that follows takes us from explosive factories that often went up in smoke to the modern world we find ourselves in today. How did plastics go from being a saviour of the environment to a cause for concern? How did we get hooked on plastic?
Presenter: Helena Merriman
Photo: A man checks used plastic bottles for recycling at a recycling station in Agartala
By BBC World Service4.6
695695 ratings
The story of how the search for a material to replace ivory changed our lives forever. In the 19th century a billiard ball company placed an advert in a newspaper offering $10,000 to anyone who could come up with a substitute for ivory. There was growing concern that companies were hunting elephants into extinction so they could use their ivory for billiard balls, buttons and umbrella handles. The story that follows takes us from explosive factories that often went up in smoke to the modern world we find ourselves in today. How did plastics go from being a saviour of the environment to a cause for concern? How did we get hooked on plastic?
Presenter: Helena Merriman
Photo: A man checks used plastic bottles for recycling at a recycling station in Agartala

7,941 Listeners

378 Listeners

524 Listeners

863 Listeners

1,065 Listeners

297 Listeners

5,586 Listeners

1,809 Listeners

973 Listeners

587 Listeners

2,117 Listeners

356 Listeners

966 Listeners

408 Listeners

427 Listeners

228 Listeners

839 Listeners

364 Listeners

74 Listeners

473 Listeners

240 Listeners

348 Listeners

236 Listeners

328 Listeners

3,243 Listeners

76 Listeners

669 Listeners

535 Listeners

629 Listeners

393 Listeners

240 Listeners

54 Listeners

81 Listeners

94 Listeners