News | National
20 Jan 2026 11:35
NZCity News
NZCity CalculatorReturn to NZCity

  • Start Page
  • Personalise
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • Finance
  • Shopping
  • Jobs
  • Horoscopes
  • Lotto Results
  • Photo Gallery
  • Site Gallery
  • TVNow
  • Dating
  • SearchNZ
  • NZSearch
  • Crime.co.nz
  • RugbyLeague
  • Make Home
  • About NZCity
  • Contact NZCity
  • Your Privacy
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Join for Free

  •   Home > News > National

    Takeaway coffee cups release thousands of microplastic particles

    The material of your coffee cup matters more than you might think.

    Xiangyu Liu, Research Fellow, School of Environment and Science and Australian Rivers Institute, Griffith University
    The Conversation


    It’s 7:45am. You grab a takeaway coffee from your local cafe, wrap your hands around the warm cup, take a sip, and head to the office.

    To most of us, that cup feels harmless – just a convenient tool for caffeine delivery. However, if that cup is made of plastic, or has a thin plastic lining, there is a high chance it’s shedding thousands of tiny plastic fragments directly into your drink.

    In Australia alone, we use a staggering 1.45 billion single-use hot beverage cups every year, along with roughly 890 million plastic lids. Globally, that number swells to an estimated 500 billion cups annually.

    In new research I coauthored, published in Journal of Hazardous Materials: Plastics, we looked at how these cups behave when they get hot.

    The message is clear: heat is a primary driver of microplastic release, and the material of your cup matters more than you might think.

    What are microplastics?

    Microplastics are fragments of plastic ranging from about 1 micrometre to 5 millimetres in size – roughly from a speck of dust to the size of a sesame seed.

    They can be created when larger plastic items break down, or they can be released directly from products during normal use. These particles end up in our environment, our food, and eventually, our bodies.

    Currently, we don’t have conclusive evidence on just how much of that microplastic remains in our bodies. Studies on this subject are highly prone to contamination and it’s really difficult to accurately measure the levels of such tiny particles in human tissue.

    Furthermore, scientists are still piecing together what microplastics might mean for human health in the long term. More research is urgently needed, but in the meantime, it’s good to be aware of potential microplastic sources in our daily lives.

    Temperature matters

    My colleagues and I first conducted a meta-analysis – a statistical synthesis of existing research – analysing data from 30 peer-reviewed studies.

    We looked at how common plastics such as polyethylene and polypropylene behave under different conditions. One factor stood out above all others: temperature.

    As the temperature of the liquid inside a container increases, the release of microplastics generally increases too. In the studies we reviewed, reported releases ranged from a few hundred particles to more than 8 million particles per litre, depending on the material and study design.

    Interestingly, “soaking time” – how long the drink sits in the cup – was not a consistent driver. This suggests that leaving our drink in a plastic cup for a long time isn’t as important as the initial temperature of the liquid when it first hits the plastic.

    Testing 400 coffee cups

    To see how this works in the real world, we collected 400 coffee cups of two major types around Brisbane: plastic cups made of polyethylene and plastic-lined paper cups which look like paper but have a thin plastic coating inside.

    We tested them at 5°C (iced coffee temperature) and 60°C (hot coffee temperature). While both types released microplastics, the results revealed two major trends.

    First, material matters. The paper cups with plastic linings released fewer microplastics than the all-plastic cups at both temperatures.

    Second, heat triggers a significant release. For the all-plastic cups, switching from cold to hot water increased the microplastic release by about 33%. If someone drinks 300 millilitres of coffee in a cup made of polyethylene per day, they could ingest 363,000 pieces of microplastic particles every year.

    But why exactly does heat matter so much?

    Using high-resolution imaging, we examined the inner walls of these cups and found that all-plastic cups had much rougher surfaces – full of “peaks and valleys” – compared to the plastic-lined paper cups.

    This rougher texture makes it easier for particles to break away. Heat accelerates this process by softening the plastic and causing it to expand and contract, creating more surface irregularities that eventually fragment into our drink.

    Managing risks

    We don’t have to give up our morning takeaway habit, but we can change how we approach it to manage the risk.

    For hot drinks, the best option is to use a reusable cup made of stainless steel, ceramic, or glass, as these materials do not shed microplastics. If we must use a disposable cup, our research suggests that plastic-lined paper cups generally shed fewer particles than pure plastic cups, though neither is microplastic free.

    Finally, since heat is the factor that triggers plastic release, avoid putting boiling liquids directly into plastic-lined containers. Telling the barista to make our coffee slightly cooler before it hits the cup can reduce the physical stress on the plastic lining and lower the overall exposure.

    By understanding how heat and material choice interact, we can design better products and make better choices for our daily caffeine fix.


    The author acknowledges the contribution of Professor Chengrong Chen to this article.

    The Conversation

    Xiangyu Liu is affiliated with the Solving Plastic Waste Cooperative Research Centre.

    This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.
    © 2026 TheConversation, NZCity

     Other National News
     20 Jan: Why Keir Starmer had to speak out against Trump over Greenland after staying quiet on Venezuela
     20 Jan: The 148-kilometre third stage of cycling's Tour of Southland has started from Riverton to Te Anau
     20 Jan: How George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four predicted the global power shifts happening now
     20 Jan: A year on from his second inauguration, Trump 2.0 has one defining word: power
     20 Jan: For 80 years, the president’s party has almost always lost House seats in midterm elections, a pattern that makes the 2026 congressional outlook clear
     20 Jan: One person's in critical condition after an incident in Taranaki
     20 Jan: A search for answers - after a body was found on the rocks at a beach on Auckland's North Shore
     Top Stories

    RUGBY RUGBY
    Don't be surprised if the coaching nous of Scott Robertson is lured to the UK More...


    BUSINESS BUSINESS
    Fletcher Building is selling off its construction arm to a French multinational More...



     Today's News

    Business:
    Fletcher Building is selling off its construction arm to a French multinational 11:17

    National:
    Why Keir Starmer had to speak out against Trump over Greenland after staying quiet on Venezuela 11:17

    Living & Travel:
    China ramps up crackdown on Christians amid global political pressures 11:17

    Lower South Island:
    The 148-kilometre third stage of cycling's Tour of Southland has started from Riverton to Te Anau 10:47

    Cricket:
    Black Caps wicketkeeper Tom Blundell is relishing time without gloves in T20 Super Smash cricket 10:47

    Environment:
    Falling trees have cut power to hundreds of properties in Northland - as blustery wet weather hangs around the upper North Island 10:37

    Politics:
    ‘We got lazy and complacent’: Swedish pensioners explain how abolishing the wealth tax changed their country 10:37

    Living & Travel:
    The air force's Ohakea base has been unstaffed overnight since the pandemic, effectively closing New Zealand to overseas aircraft in some circumstances 10:27

    National:
    How George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four predicted the global power shifts happening now 10:27

    National:
    A year on from his second inauguration, Trump 2.0 has one defining word: power 10:17


     News Search






    Power Search


    © 2026 New Zealand City Ltd