FRIDAY, 8
JULY 2022 - 09:04
Microplastics in milk and meat from Dutch cows,
pigs: Amsterdam researchers
Meat and
milk from Dutch cows and pigs contain microplastics, researchers from the VU
University Amsterdam have discovered. They also found tiny amounts of at least
three types of plastic in the blood of all the animals they studied: 12 cows
and 12 pigs. The study was modest in size, but the Plastic Soup Foundation that
commissioned it called the results “shocking.”
The
researchers also found at least one type of plastic in seven of the eight beef
samples tested, as well as five of the eight pieces of pork. Eighteen of the 25
milk samples contained microplastics.
The
researchers think contaminated feed may be how the microplastics ended up in
the pigs and cows. Fresh food that they tested contained no measurable plastic
particles. But they did find microplastics in all twelve samples of feed
pellets and shredded animal feed they examined.
“This study
raises serious concerns about the contamination of our food chain with microplastics,”
said Maria Westerbos, director of the Plastic Soup Foundation. She added that
“farmers are not responsible for this.” According to Westerbos, it appears that
some of the leftover batches from the food industry are “processed into animal
feed, packaging and all.” The foundation suspects that “virtually every steak
and hamburger” contains small pieces of plastic.
The VU
researchers did not confirm those assumptions. Due to the modest size of their
study, the Amsterdam researchers warned against drawing too large conclusions.
They called their results “a first indication that plastic particles are
present in detectable concentrations in modern animal feed, the animals that
eat it, and in farm products.” The study is also inconclusive on how harmful the
microplastics in food are. According to the VU researchers, further study into
the extent of the exposure and possible risks is desirable.
According
to the Plastic Soup Foundation, the government should guarantee that the food
chain is entirely plastic-free as a precaution. Minister of Agriculture Henk
Staghouwer must work on this, the organization said, also starting a petition
on the topic. The Dutch Food and Consumer Product Safety Authority (NVWA)
should also enforce it more strictly, according to the Plastic Soup Foundation.
Reporting by ANP

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