Science

Plastic pollution is one of the major health threats to the world


The scourge of plastic pollution: Waste is one of the major health threats to the world, UN report warns

  • The UN released its Sixth Global Environment Outlook on threats to the world
  • The 700-page report was compiled by by 250 scientists from 250 nations
  • Report warns that 80% of the plastic ending up in the sea comes from the land

Plastic pollution is emerging as one of the major health threats to the world, a landmark United Nations report has warned.

The huge report assesses risks to human life from environmental pollutants as the world’s population.

The eight million tons of plastic which end up dumped in the sea a year is one of the threats that is requiring urgent action – but there is as yet no international agreement to halt the flow.

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Plastic pollution is emerging as one of the major health threats to the world, a landmark United Nations report has warned (stock image)

Plastic pollution is emerging as one of the major health threats to the world, a landmark United Nations report has warned (stock image) 

The 700-page report, the Sixth Global Environment Outlook [GEO] compiled by 250 scientists from 250 nations was unveiled at the United Nations Environment Assembly in Nairobi.

The report warns that 80 per cent of the plastic ending up in the sea comes from the land.

It warns: ‘Marine plastic litter can result in a significant ecological impact from entanglement and ingestion, and can also act as a vector for the transport of invasive species and other pollutants.’

Other health threats to humanity include inappropriate use of pesticides, heavy metals, which are of ‘significant concern’ and appearing in ‘alarmingly high levels in our food supply’, the report goes on.

It also highlights how skyrocketing demand from the world’s rapidly expanding population will fuel global warming, land degradation and deforestation, the report warns.

A tax on red meat could encourage people towards a plant-based diet, the report warns.

The world’s population is currently 7.7 billion but by 2050 the planet will be home to up to 10 billion.

Incentives to reduce meat eating, such as taxes will be urgent to promote ‘sustainable and healthy diets’.

Food waste is also at unacceptably high levels with the world currently throws away a third of all food produced.

Among rich countries the figure is even higher – with 56 per cent of food is wasted.

By 2050, people getting sick from diseases caused by antimicrobial resistant bacteria in water supplies could become a major cause of death unless it is controlled.

Overall a quarter of all premature deaths and diseases worldwide are due to manmade pollution and environmental damage, the United Nations said.

The eight million tons of plastic which end up dumped in the sea a year is one of the threats that is requiring urgent action – but there is as yet no international agreement to halt the flow (file photo)

The eight million tons of plastic which end up dumped in the sea a year is one of the threats that is requiring urgent action – but there is as yet no international agreement to halt the flow (file photo) 

The report said that poor environmental conditions ‘cause approximately 25 percent of global disease and mortality’

This amounts to around 9 million deaths in 2015 alone.

Chemicals pumped into the seas cause ‘potentially multi-generational’ adverse health effects.

‘Urgent action at an unprecedented scale is necessary to arrest and reverse this situation,’ the report warned.

Joyeeta Gupta, GEO co-chair, said: ‘Everyone is saying that by 2050 we have to feed 10 billion people, but that doesn’t mean we have to double production.

‘If we reduce our waste and perhaps have less meat you could immediately reduce that problem,’ adding ‘that would require changes in the way we live.’

Despite the gloomy outlook she and her co-author Paul Ekins said: ‘There is still time but the window is closing fast.’

HOW DO MICROPLASTICS GET INTO THE OCEANS FROM RIVERS?

Urban flooding is causing microplastics to be flushed into our oceans even faster than thought, according to scientists looking at pollution in rivers.

Waterways in Greater Manchester are now so heavily contaminated by microplastics that particles are found in every sample – including even the smallest streams.

This pollution is a major contributor to contamination in the oceans, researchers found as part of the first detailed catchment-wide study anywhere in the world.

This debris – including microbeads and microfibres – are toxic to ecosystems.

Scientists tested 40 sites around Manchester and found every waterway contained these small toxic particles.

Microplastics are very small pieces of plastic debris including microbeads, microfibres and plastic fragments.

It has long been known they enter river systems from multiple sources including industrial effluent, storm water drains and domestic wastewater.

However, although around 90 per cent of microplastic contamination in the oceans is thought to originate from land, not much is known about their movements.

Most rivers examined had around 517,000 plastic particles per square metre, according to researchers from the University of Manchester who carried out the detailed study.

Following a period of major flooding, the researchers re-sampled at all of the sites.

They found levels of contamination had fallen at the majority of them, and the flooding had removed about 70 per cent of the microplastics stored on the river beds.

This demonstrates that flood events can transfer large quantities of microplastics from urban river to the oceans.



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