‘Plastic Is Lethal’: Groundbreaking Report Reveals Health
Risks at Every Stage in Plastics Life Cycle
Olivia Rosane Feb. 22, 2019 07:48AM EST
A new study reveals the health risks posed by the making,
use and disposal of plastics.
With eight million metric tons of plastic entering the
world's oceans every year, there is growing concern about the proliferation of
plastics in the environment. Despite this, surprisingly little is known about
the full impact of plastic pollution on human health.
But a first-of-its-kind study released Tuesday sets out to
change that. The study, Plastic & Health: The Hidden Costs of a Plastic
Planet, is especially groundbreaking because it looks at the health impacts of
every stage in the life cycle of plastics, from the extraction of the fossil
fuels that make them to their permanence in the environment. While previous
studies have focused on particular products, manufacturing processes or moments
in the creation and use of plastics, this study shows that plastics pose
serious health risks at every stage in their production, use and disposal.
"The heavy toxic burdens associated with plastic—at
every stage of its life cycle—offers another convincing argument why reducing
and not increasing production of plastics is the only way forward," report
co-author and Break Free From Plastic Movement (BFFP) Global Coordinator Von
Hernandez said in a press release. "It is shocking how the existing
regulatory regime continues to give the whole plastic industrial complex the
license to play Russian roulette with our lives and our health. Plastic is
lethal, and this report shows us why."
The report was a joint effort by the Center for
International Environmental Law (CIEL), Earthworks, Global Alliance for
Incinerator Alternatives (GAIA), Healthy Babies Bright Futures (HBBF), IPEN,
Texas Environmental Justice Advocacy Services (t.e.j.a.s.), University of
Exeter, UPSTREAM and BFFP. It explains in depth how each stage in the plastics
life cycle puts human health at risk.
1. "Extraction and Transport of Fossil Feedstocks for
Plastic": The extraction of the oil and gas needed to make plastic
releases toxic chemicals into the air and water. The chemicals used to produce
plastic feedstock via fracking are particularly dangerous: More than 170 of
them can cause documented health problems including cancer and damage to the
nervous and immune systems.
2. "Refining and Production of Plastic Resins and
Additives": The process of refining fossil fuels into plastic resin
releases toxic chemicals into the air that can cause cancer and damage the
nervous system, among other issues. Industrial workers and communities near
refineries are especially at risk.
3. "Consumer Products and Packaging": Plastic
products themselves can harm their users both in the form of microplastics that
break off from the larger product and chemicals contained in the product that
can cause cancer and developmental problems, as well as disrupt the hormone
system.
4. "Toxic Releases from Plastic Waste Management":
Every method for eliminating plastic waste, such as incineration and
gasification, releases acid gases, organic substances like dioxins and furans
and toxic metals like lead and mercury into the air, soil and water. This is
also particularly dangerous for plant workers and surrounding communities.
5. "Fragmenting and Microplastics": As plastics
break down, they release tiny fragments into the environment that humans can
swallow or inhale. Doing so can cause problems like inflammation, genotoxicity,
oxidative stress, apoptosis and necrosis, which can lead to cancer, heart
disease, diabetes, stroke and other potentially deadly or chronic ailments.
6. "Cascading Exposure as Plastic Degrades": The
chemicals added to plastics easily spread into the surrounding environment as
the plastic breaks down, posing an ever-increasing risk to water, soil or body
tissue where plastic is present.
7. "Ongoing Environmental Exposure": Plastic
degrading in the ocean or on land builds up in the food chain as it is ingested
by larger and larger animals. The plastic both leaches the chemicals it already
contained into the environment and accumulates other toxic chemicals present in
the environment as it works its way up the food chain.
In order to combat the problem, the report recommends
treating plastic exposure as a human rights issue, making sure every stage in
the plastic life cycle is addressed, drafting laws that require accurate
information about what goes into plastics during all stages of production,
ensuring transparency in the development of solutions and making sure that
solutions take into account the global reach of plastic production and
proliferation.
Other organizations who work on plastic pollution have praised
the report for its in-depth investigation of the crisis.
"This new report provides further evidence of plastic's
detrimental effects on a global scale—and it's more personal than ever,"
Oceana chief policy officer Jacqueline Savitz said in a statement.
"Plastic is impacting human health through every single stage of its life
cycle, from extraction and production to consumer use, and it is entering our
food chain. The risks to human health begin long before plastic even makes it
onto store shelves, providing yet another reason why waste-management efforts
alone can't reverse this crisis. We need companies to take responsibility for
plastic's effects on our health and the environment, stop wasting time with
false solutions and turn to sustainable alternatives to plastic before it's too
late."
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