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Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumHelmholtz Centre for Environmental Research: Environmental Impacts of Plastics: Moving beyond the perspective on waste
https://www.ufz.de/index.php?en=36336&webc_pm=44/2024press release, 21. November 2024
Environmental Impacts of Plastics: Moving beyond the perspective on waste
A UFZ team analyses the impacts of plastics on climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental pollution
The fact that plastics pollute the environment and generate problems has been well-researched in many areas. However, there is little information on the impacts of plastics on climate and biodiversity. In an overview study for the journal Environment International, an interdisciplinary research team from the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ) has analysed the impacts of plastics on the three planetary crises of climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental pollution. They are calling for plastics regulations that account for the multifaceted impacts of plastics in these three crises. The negotiations on the UN Global Plastics Treaty to be conducted from 25 November in Busan (South Korea) represent an opportunity to introduce such regulations.
The effects of plastic on the three planetary crises of climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental pollution: scientific knowledge is still patchy and unevenly distributed.
Photo: Annika Jahnke / UFZ
The United Nations have introduced the term "triple planetary crisis" to describe the interlinked global crises of climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental pollution. The UN is using this term to highlight the interdependence and mutual impact of these crises on ecosystems, societies and economies. However, while the contribution of plastics on environmental pollution appears to be well researched, biodiversity and climate change have received comparatively little attention. "Scientific understanding of the interactions of these crises with regard to plastics is currently patchy and unevenly distributed," concludes author and UFZ hydrogeologist Dr Christian Schmidt.
The UFZ researchers operate over a wide range of disciplines from hydrology, toxicology, microbiology and environmental chemistry to social sciences and are part of the UFZ's Microplastics Competence Cluster. They evaluated more than 19,000 scientific studies in preparing this article. The findings are very clear: 17,463 of the evaluated studies address the negative impacts of plastics and associated chemicals on environmental pollution, only 1,279 consider the impacts on climate change and a scant 652 focus on the impacts on biodiversity. "There is an extremely divergent drift in the available knowledge," summarizes Prof Annika Jahnke, author and UFZ environmental chemist.
A comprehensive knowledge base is available for environmental pollution, particularly concerning the plastics life cycle. Since the 1950s, approximately 9,200 million tons of plastics have been produced around the world. Of this, 2,900 million tons are currently in use, comprising 2,700 million tons of primary plastics and roughly 200 million tons of recycled material. 5,300 million tons have ended up in landfills and 1000 million tons have been incinerated. It is also known that between 1,750 and 2,500 million tons are considered "mismanaged", meaning that they can leak into the environment in an unplanned manner. The hazards that plastic-associated chemicals pose to humans and environmental organisms and the impact of plastics on oceans, soils and freshwater ecosystems are also regarded as well researched. However, going further into detail reveals knowledge deficits here as well, which in turn correspond to research gaps: How are plastics in the environment transported further by wind and water? How much plastics reach the oceans? Where do plastics accumulate in the environment? What are the effects of UV radiation, temperature differences or mechanical stress on plastics and the chemicals they contain? Furthermore, only a paucity of studies deal with the effects of plastics on the atmosphere and the cryosphere, which is that part of the Earth's surface where water is present as snow or ice. Nanoplastics have also generally been the subject of less research than microplastics. There are significantly more studies on microplastics, as the particles are larger and could therefore be studied by a large number of institutions for some time. The chemical composition of the plastics is also largely unknown, as they contain many added chemicals in addition to the polymer. Examples of these are UV stabilizers, plasticizers or associated processing aids that can be used to facilitate processing of the plastics or to lend them specific desired properties. To date, roughly 640 million tons of additive chemicals have been added to plastic products. "But little is known about how they are released and what consequences they have for people and the environment," explains Annika Jahnke.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2024.109059Environmental Impacts of Plastics: Moving beyond the perspective on waste
A UFZ team analyses the impacts of plastics on climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental pollution
The fact that plastics pollute the environment and generate problems has been well-researched in many areas. However, there is little information on the impacts of plastics on climate and biodiversity. In an overview study for the journal Environment International, an interdisciplinary research team from the Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ) has analysed the impacts of plastics on the three planetary crises of climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental pollution. They are calling for plastics regulations that account for the multifaceted impacts of plastics in these three crises. The negotiations on the UN Global Plastics Treaty to be conducted from 25 November in Busan (South Korea) represent an opportunity to introduce such regulations.
The effects of plastic on the three planetary crises of climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental pollution: scientific knowledge is still patchy and unevenly distributed.
Photo: Annika Jahnke / UFZ
The United Nations have introduced the term "triple planetary crisis" to describe the interlinked global crises of climate change, biodiversity loss and environmental pollution. The UN is using this term to highlight the interdependence and mutual impact of these crises on ecosystems, societies and economies. However, while the contribution of plastics on environmental pollution appears to be well researched, biodiversity and climate change have received comparatively little attention. "Scientific understanding of the interactions of these crises with regard to plastics is currently patchy and unevenly distributed," concludes author and UFZ hydrogeologist Dr Christian Schmidt.
The UFZ researchers operate over a wide range of disciplines from hydrology, toxicology, microbiology and environmental chemistry to social sciences and are part of the UFZ's Microplastics Competence Cluster. They evaluated more than 19,000 scientific studies in preparing this article. The findings are very clear: 17,463 of the evaluated studies address the negative impacts of plastics and associated chemicals on environmental pollution, only 1,279 consider the impacts on climate change and a scant 652 focus on the impacts on biodiversity. "There is an extremely divergent drift in the available knowledge," summarizes Prof Annika Jahnke, author and UFZ environmental chemist.
A comprehensive knowledge base is available for environmental pollution, particularly concerning the plastics life cycle. Since the 1950s, approximately 9,200 million tons of plastics have been produced around the world. Of this, 2,900 million tons are currently in use, comprising 2,700 million tons of primary plastics and roughly 200 million tons of recycled material. 5,300 million tons have ended up in landfills and 1000 million tons have been incinerated. It is also known that between 1,750 and 2,500 million tons are considered "mismanaged", meaning that they can leak into the environment in an unplanned manner. The hazards that plastic-associated chemicals pose to humans and environmental organisms and the impact of plastics on oceans, soils and freshwater ecosystems are also regarded as well researched. However, going further into detail reveals knowledge deficits here as well, which in turn correspond to research gaps: How are plastics in the environment transported further by wind and water? How much plastics reach the oceans? Where do plastics accumulate in the environment? What are the effects of UV radiation, temperature differences or mechanical stress on plastics and the chemicals they contain? Furthermore, only a paucity of studies deal with the effects of plastics on the atmosphere and the cryosphere, which is that part of the Earth's surface where water is present as snow or ice. Nanoplastics have also generally been the subject of less research than microplastics. There are significantly more studies on microplastics, as the particles are larger and could therefore be studied by a large number of institutions for some time. The chemical composition of the plastics is also largely unknown, as they contain many added chemicals in addition to the polymer. Examples of these are UV stabilizers, plasticizers or associated processing aids that can be used to facilitate processing of the plastics or to lend them specific desired properties. To date, roughly 640 million tons of additive chemicals have been added to plastic products. "But little is known about how they are released and what consequences they have for people and the environment," explains Annika Jahnke.
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Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research: Environmental Impacts of Plastics: Moving beyond the perspective on waste (Original Post)
OKIsItJustMe
Nov 21
OP
wintemark
(33 posts)1. Research papers on plastic recycling
I don't know if I could find the original white paper, but I do have a copy of it saved in my work files. Japan has had a zero landfill process for converting waste plastic to anhydrous ammonia and similar products since 2002 but the project was halted after the US fracking boom crashed natural prices and made this process financially unviable. I see from a recent google search that Japan is starting to revive that project.
"Ammonia Production Process
through Recycling of Plastic Containers and
Wrapping Version 1.0"
OKIsItJustMe
(21,021 posts)2. Here's one...