The Minderoo-Monaco Commission on Plastics and Human Health
説明
Plastics have conveyed great benefits to humanity and made possible some of the most significant advances of modern civilization in fields as diverse as medicine, electronics, aerospace, construction, food packaging, and sports. It is now clear, however, that plastics are also responsible for significant harms to human health, the economy, and the earth's environment. These harms occur at every stage of the plastic life cycle, from extraction of the coal, oil, and gas that are its main feedstocks through to ultimate disposal into the environment. The extent of these harms not been systematically assessed, their magnitude not fully quantified, and their economic costs not comprehensively counted.The goals of this Minderoo-Monaco Commission on Plastics and Human Health are to comprehensively examine plastics' impacts across their life cycle on: (1) human health and well-being; (2) the global environment, especially the ocean; (3) the economy; and (4) vulnerable populations-the poor, minorities, and the world's children. On the basis of this examination, the Commission offers science-based recommendations designed to support development of a Global Plastics Treaty, protect human health, and save lives.This Commission report contains seven Sections. Following an Introduction, Section 2 presents a narrative review of the processes involved in plastic production, use, and disposal and notes the hazards to human health and the environment associated with each of these stages. Section 3 describes plastics' impacts on the ocean and notes the potential for plastic in the ocean to enter the marine food web and result in human exposure. Section 4 details plastics' impacts on human health. Section 5 presents a first-order estimate of plastics' health-related economic costs. Section 6 examines the intersection between plastic, social inequity, and environmental injustice. Section 7 presents the Commission's findings and recommendations.Plastics are complex, highly heterogeneous, synthetic chemical materials. Over 98% of plastics are produced from fossil carbon- coal, oil and gas. Plastics are comprised of a carbon-based polymer backbone and thousands of additional chemicals that are incorporated into polymers to convey specific properties such as color, flexibility, stability, water repellence, flame retardation, and ultraviolet resistance. Many of these added chemicals are highly toxic. They include carcinogens, neurotoxicants and endocrine disruptors such as phthalates, bisphenols, per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), brominated flame retardants, and organophosphate flame retardants. They are integral components of plastic and are responsible for many of plastics' harms to human health and the environment.Global plastic production has increased almost exponentially since World War II, and in this time more than 8,300 megatons (Mt) of plastic have been manufactured. Annual production volume has grown from under 2 Mt in 1950 to 460 Mt in 2019, a 230-fold increase, and is on track to triple by 2060. More than half of all plastic ever made has been produced since 2002. Single-use plastics account for 35-40% of current plastic production and represent the most rapidly growing segment of plastic manufacture.Explosive recent growth in plastics production reflects a deliberate pivot by the integrated multinational fossil-carbon corporations that produce coal, oil and gas and that also manufacture plastics. These corporations are reducing their production of fossil fuels and increasing plastics manufacture. The two principal factors responsible for this pivot are decreasing global demand for carbon-based fuels due to increases in 'green' energy, and massive expansion of oil and gas production due to fracking.Plastic manufacture is energy-intensive and contributes significantly to climate change. At present, plastic production is responsible for an estimated 3.7% of global greenhouse gas emissions, more than the contribution of Brazil. This fraction is projected to increase to 4.5% by 2060 if current trends continue unchecked.The plastic life cycle has three phases: production, use, and disposal. In production, carbon feedstocks-coal, gas, and oil-are transformed through energy-intensive, catalytic processes into a vast array of products. Plastic use occurs in every aspect of modern life and results in widespread human exposure to the chemicals contained in plastic. Single-use plastics constitute the largest portion of current use, followed by synthetic fibers and construction.Plastic disposal is highly inefficient, with recovery and recycling rates below 10% globally. The result is that an estimated 22 Mt of plastic waste enters the environment each year, much of it single-use plastic and are added to the more than 6 gigatons of plastic waste that have accumulated since 1950. Strategies for disposal of plastic waste include controlled and uncontrolled landfilling, open burning, thermal conversion, and export. 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収録刊行物
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- Annals of Global Health
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Annals of Global Health 89 2023-01-01
Ubiquity Press, Ltd.
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キーワード
- [SDE] Environmental Sciences
- Male
- Lung Neoplasms
- Microplastics
- environmental health
- Infectious and parasitic diseases
- RC109-216
- Endocrine Disruptors
- human health
- [SHS]Humanities and Social Sciences
- Persistent Organic Pollutants
- Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive
- 501002 Applied psychology
- [CHIM] Chemical Sciences
- Ocean health
- Child
- Original Research
- Flame Retardants
- ocean health
- 501001 Allgemeine Psychologie
- Environmental health
- Coal
- Cardiovascular Diseases
- SDG 3 – Gesundheit und Wohlergehen
- Child, Preschool
- [SDE]Environmental Sciences
- Female
- [SHS] Humanities and Social Sciences
- Public aspects of medicine
- RA1-1270
- Plastics
- microplastics
- plastic additives
- 501002 Angewandte Psychologie
- Greenhouse Gases
- Plastic life cycle
- SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
- plastic life cycle human health ocean health microplastics plastic additives environmental health
- [CHIM]Chemical Sciences
- Animals
- Humans
- Ecosystem
- Plastic additives
- 501001 General psychology
- Monaco
- Human health
- United States
- plastic life cycle
詳細情報 詳細情報について
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- CRID
- 1871991017451992320
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- ISSN
- 22149996
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- HANDLE
- 11353/10.2071797
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- PubMed
- 37841805
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- データソース種別
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- OpenAIRE