How Tea Benefits Our Body and Ecological Health?

Tea is one of the most popular beverages in the world. It has been used for medicinal purposes since ancient times and it still has a lot of health benefits to offer.

The most important health benefits of tea are that it helps in weight loss, reduces the risk of heart disease, lowers cholesterol levels, prevents cancer, and protects against diabetes.

Adding supplements to your tea like Tea Burn has been reported to be more effective for weight loss.

How Does Tea Benefit the Planet?

Tea is one of the most consumed drinks in the world. It has been around for thousands of years and has a long history of health benefits.

Tea is one of the most consumed drinks in the world. It has been around for thousands of years and has a long history of health benefits. Tea leaves are harvested from plants that grow on trees, bushes, or vines. The leaves are then dried and fermented before being blended with water to create tea. Tea can be brewed hot or cold depending on preference and the time available to brew it.

The process to produce tea is not too different from what happens when you brew coffee but it is important to note that tea leaves are not roasted like coffee beans which means they don’t release as many chemicals into the air during roasting as coffee beans do when they’re roasted.

The leaves are usually steeped in boiling water for around four to five minutes before removing the teabag or straining the liquid into a cup. A light, fresh-tasting, and very refreshing drink which is good for people who have high blood pressure, diabetes, or heart problems.

Read also: The Supplements Industry Should Be at the Forefront of the Sustainability Movement

Are teabags biodegradable waste?

Teabags: you have them in all shapes and sizes. Usually, they are made of paper, sometimes plastic, but often a combination of these. Canadian research now shows that plastic tea bags excrete billions of pieces of plastic. “Those bags have to be removed, that seems clear to me,” says Dutch professor Dick Vethaak.

You don’t see it and you don’t taste it, but if you use a plastic tea bag, you are really drinking pieces of plastic. Very small pieces. To be precise: 11.6 billion microplastics and 3.1 billion nano plastics.

It cannot be healthy, but whether it is really unhealthy is currently being investigated. The Dutch professor Dick Vethaak is not reassured. He works at the Deltares knowledge institute and is also a VU professor of water quality and health.

Canadian scientists have shown that so many plastic particles get into your tea. They dipped four different nylon or PET plastic bags in water at 95 degrees Celsius. The amounts of micro-and nanoparticles they found were much greater than those found in food and water to date.

Teabag belongs to the residual waste

Coffee pods and tea bags are not part of the PMD or GFT, Milieucentraal reports. “The filter paper of coffee pads and most tea bags contains plastic,” it reads.

There are tea bags that are compostable, for example with the bioplastic solon, but because waste processors cannot distinguish between tea bags made of paper, plastic, or bioplastic, the motto is all tea bags are treated as residual waste. Until all tea bags (must be) compostable.