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Date: January 26, 2022 at 04:35:46
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Scientists Warning:Chemical Pollution now Exceeds Safe Planetary Limit

URL: Scientists issue Dire Warning: Chemical Pollution now Exceeds Safe Planetary Limit


Scientists issue Dire Warning: Chemical Pollution now Exceeds Safe
Planetary Limit

By Patricia Villarrubia-Gómez | –

The production and release of plastics, pesticides, industrial compounds,
antibiotics and other pollutants is now happening so fast and on such a large
scale that it has exceeded the planetary boundary for chemical pollution, the
safe limit for humanity, a new study claims.

We asked Patricia Villarrubia-Gómez, a PhD candidate at Stockholm
University and one of the authors of the study, to explain what this means.

What are planetary boundaries?

In 2009, an international team of researchers identified nine planetary
boundaries that maintain the remarkably stable state Earth has remained
within for 10,000 years – since the dawn of civilisation.

These boundaries include greenhouse gas concentrations in the
atmosphere, the ozone layer, an intact biosphere and freshwater. The
researchers quantified the boundaries that influence Earth’s stability and
concluded in 2015 that human activity has breached four of them.
Greenhouse gas emissions are pushing the global climate into a new, hotter
state, species extinctions threaten the biosphere’s integrity, the conversion
of forests to farmland has degraded the quality of land and industrial and
agricultural processes have radically altered natural cycles of phosphorus
and nitrogen.

The researchers lacked the data to quantify the boundary for chemical
pollution, otherwise known as novel entities (essentially, any substances
made by humans plus natural elements like heavy metals which human
activity mobilises or transports at high volumes), until now. Our research
suggests we have crossed this boundary and beyond the known safe
operating space for humanity.

A diagram depicting how much humanity has transgressed planetary
boundaries.
In uncharted territory: humanity is transgressing boundaries which maintain
a stable planetary state.
Stockholm Resilience Centre, Author provided
How did you discover this?

This project involved 14 authors in five countries and was led by Linn
Persson, an expert in chemical pollution at the Stockholm Environment
Institute. We wanted to be able to understand the consequences of taking,
using and releasing novel entities on a larger scale in the face of huge gaps
in our knowledge. Essentially, we wanted to go beyond the individual’s ability
to experience and comprehend these things.

We investigated a set of control variables that capture several of the
complexities and characteristics of the planetary boundary for chemical
pollution. One of these is the trend in the production of novel entities – the
volume of chemicals and plastics produced, or the share of chemicals
available on the market that have data on their safety or are assessed by
regulators.

Another thing we assessed was the continued trend of global emissions of
these chemical substances, including plastics, into the environment. We also
considered the unwanted effects of these entities on ecosystem processes
by drawing on evidence of the toxicity of chemical pollution or the role of
plastics in disturbing the biosphere.

A large tropical fish swims among plastic waste.
Plastic waste is accumulating in the ocean.
Rich Carey/Shutterstock
When did humanity breach this limit?

It is difficult to say specifically when humanity breached the planetary
boundary for chemical pollution. Unlike other boundaries, this one deals with
thousands of different entities.

We know there has been a 50-fold increase in the production of chemicals
since 1950. This is projected to triple again by 2050. Plastic production
alone increased 79% between 2000 and 2015.

There are 350,000 synthetic chemicals in production globally, and only a
very small fraction of these is assessed for toxicity. We know little about
their cumulative effects or how they behave in a mixture. This is important,
as we are all exposed to (often) small concentrations of thousands of
substances over our entire lives. We are only beginning to understand the
large-scale, long-term effects of this exposure.

We judged that the boundary had been transgressed because the rate at
which these pollutants are appearing in the environment far exceeds the
capacity of governments to assess the risk, let alone control potential
problems.

What is very important to us is that this study highlights the global scale and
severity of chemical pollution. Not only because of the effects of producing
and releasing such huge volumes of these substances into the environment
on a daily basis, but also because it puts into perspective the consequences
of human activity on a geological scale. These changes, led by humans, will
have persistent and cumulative effects long after we have gone and
industries have stopped pumping them out.

What are some of the possible consequences of exceeding this planetary
boundary?

We have observed the problems and risks associated with chemicals and
plastics during their entire life cycle. Currently, this is largely linear: from
extraction, to production, to use, to waste and, finally, to release into the
environment.

Damage can occur at all of these stages. For example, fossil fuels are
extracted by processes that can lay waste to entire habitats. These raw
materials then give rise to plastics and pesticides which take lots of energy
and generate lots of climate-warming gases during manufacture. They are
used to wrap food or are applied to farm fields, and then they end up in the
soil or in rivers and, eventually, the ocean.

Their environmental impacts might be easiest to visualise according to their
effect on other planetary boundaries. Plastics are tightly connected to the
climate – approximately 98% of all plastics are made from fossil fuels and
will release CO₂ when burned as garbage. Chemicals and plastics both
affect biodiversity by adding additional stress to already beleaguered
ecosystems. Some chemicals interfere with animal hormone systems,
disrupting growth, metabolism and reproduction in wildlife.

Are some parts of the world exceeding this limit more than others?

This problem is a planetary one. As I understand it, the production and
release of chemical pollution is intrinsic to the global economic system. In
this way, the problem is like any other major environmental issue, including
climate change.

People are exposed to these chemicals everywhere, not only in the countries
where they are produced. We all use these products and chemicals keep
being released while we use them. We consume them and then dispose of
them, though they don’t simply go away.

There is a constant flow of them, and so, the situation is becoming more and
more alarming. Even as we learn more, we are also making visible the vast
unknowns that remain.

Where should governments prioritise action in order to bring humanity back
within the safe limit as soon as possible?

I would like to cite my colleagues here. Professor Carney Almroth of
Gothenburg University in Sweden says that the world must “work towards
implementing a fixed cap on chemical production and release”.

Associate Professor Sarah Cornell, my supervisor at Stockholm University,
says:

“Shifting to a circular economy is really important. That means changing
materials and products so they can be reused not wasted, designing
chemicals and products for recycling, and much better screening of
chemicals for their safety and sustainability along their whole impact
pathway in the Earth system.”

We do not wish to paralyse readers with despair. Rather, we want to inspire
action. We believe we are still on time to revert this situation, but for that we
need urgent and ambitious action to take place at an international level.

Imagine weekly climate newsletter
Don’t have time to read about climate change as much as you’d like?

Get a weekly roundup in your inbox instead. Every Wednesday, The
Conversation’s environment editor writes Imagine, a short email that goes a
little deeper into just one climate issue. Join the 10,000+ readers who’ve
subscribed so far.The Conversation

Patricia Villarrubia-Gómez, PhD Candidate in Sustainable Development,
Stockholm Resilience Centre, Stockholm University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative
Commons license. Read the original article.


Responses:
[17920] [17925]


17920


Date: January 27, 2022 at 11:41:45
From: Elaine, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Scientists Warning:Chemical Pollution now Exceeds Safe Planetary...


People are such pigs. No, that's an insult to pigs. They're such slobs. Was at an amusement park last summer when it started to rain. People bought rain ponchos. This family pulled their ponchos out of the bag and just threw the bags on the ground. They didn't care. And there are garbage receptacles all over the park.


Responses:
[17925]


17925


Date: January 29, 2022 at 05:33:40
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Scientists Warning:Chemical Pollution now Exceeds Safe...


Plastic should be illegal. There's NO need for it. It's for human convenience
& profit. We're fucked.


Responses:
None


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