State of the Science On Plastic Chemicals
Reports Andrew Craigie Reports Andrew Craigie

State of the Science On Plastic Chemicals

Although there is a wealth of scientific information on plastic chemicals and polymers to inform policymakers, implementing this evidence is challenging because information is scattered and not easily accessible. The PlastChem report and database address this issue by comprehensively and consistently synthesizing the state of the science on plastic chemicals, including their hazard properties, and their presence in polymers. The state-of-the-science report provides the publicly available evidence to inform policy development that protects public health and the environment.

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PureCycle’s (PCT) Failure To Launch
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PureCycle’s (PCT) Failure To Launch

After a months long investigation, backed by interviews, regulatory filings, and visual evidence reveals that the facility has yet to start commercial scale production four months later. We have spoken with Ohio regulators that have contradicted company claims, and former employees that have exposed numerous issues. We believe PureCycle has mislead investors about the launch of its facility, or at the very least, will not come anywhere close to meeting production targets.

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Hazardous Chemicals in Recycled and Reusable Plastic Food Packaging
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Hazardous Chemicals in Recycled and Reusable Plastic Food Packaging

All types of water pipes, not only lead, can release chemicals into drinking water. Plastic pipes, which are constructed from potentially dozens of different chemicals, release more contaminants into drinking water than unlined metal pipes, which are built of few materials. Communities need to understand the potential health risks associated with different water pipe materials so that they do not end up with what’s known as a “regrettable substitution,” or a situation in which a selected alternative turns out to be just as bad, if not worse, as the original option.

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The Perils of PVC Plastic Pipes
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The Perils of PVC Plastic Pipes

All types of water pipes, not only lead, can release chemicals into drinking water. Plastic pipes, which are constructed from potentially dozens of different chemicals, release more contaminants into drinking water than unlined metal pipes, which are built of few materials. Communities need to understand the potential health risks associated with different water pipe materials so that they do not end up with what’s known as a “regrettable substitution,” or a situation in which a selected alternative turns out to be just as bad, if not worse, as the original option.

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PVC Poison Plastic
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PVC Poison Plastic

Every day, PVC production exposes communities around the country to vinyl chloride and other PVC chemicals, a result of the inadequate U.S. regulatory system that allows the use of the most hazardous chemicals and plastics. This investigation uncovers the largest polluters of vinyl chloride in the U.S. and maps the communities regularly exposed to this dangerous chemical and its waste products.

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The Minderoo-Monaco Commission on Plastics and Human Health
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The Minderoo-Monaco Commission on Plastics and Human Health

The Minderoo-Monaco Commission on Plastics and Human Health has produced an extensive analysis of the plastics’ negative impacts on: i) human health and well-being focusing on vulnerable populations, ii) on the global environment focusing on ocean health, and iii) the economy. The report includes highly valuable sustainable solutions that can be implemented by governments and industries to minimize the negative consequences of global plastic contamination This is an urgent problem that must be addressed in the worldwide agenda in parallel to climate change, as they are closely interconnected.

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Detection of Microplastics in Human Saphenous Vein Tissue Using μFtir: A Pilot Study
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Detection of Microplastics in Human Saphenous Vein Tissue Using μFtir: A Pilot Study

Microplastics (MPs) are ubiquitous in the environment, in the human food chain, and have been recently detected in blood and lung tissues. To undertake a pilot analysis of MP contamination in human vein tissue samples with respect to their presence (if any), levels, and characteristics of any particles identified. This study analysed digested human saphenous vein tissue samples (n = 5) using μFTIR spectroscopy (size limitation of 5 μm) to detect and characterise any MPs present.

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Microplastics Occurrence, Health Effects, and Mitigation Policies: An Evidence Review for the California State Legislature
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Microplastics Occurrence, Health Effects, and Mitigation Policies: An Evidence Review for the California State Legislature

This report responds to a joint request from the California Senate Committee on Environmental Quality and the Assembly Committee on Natural Resources for evidence concerning human health effects of microplastics and public policies related to microplastics prevention and mitigation.

Research was conducted by the California State Policy Evidence Consortium (CalSPEC), anindependent program administered through the University of California Center Sacramento (UCCS) and composed of faculty, staff, and graduate student researchers across UC campuses who evaluate evidence to inform public policy deliberations.

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The Cost of Amazon’s Plastic Denial on the World’s Oceans
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The Cost of Amazon’s Plastic Denial on the World’s Oceans

For the third year, Oceana analyzed e-commerce packaging data and found that Amazon generated 709 million pounds of plastic packaging waste in 2021. This is a 18% increase of Oceana’s 2020 estimate of 599 million pounds and is enough plastic to circle the Earth more than 800 times in the form of air pillows. Oceana found, based on data from a peer-reviewed study on plastic waste pollution published in Science in 2020, that up to 26 million pounds of this plastic waste will end up in the world’s waterways and seas.

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Loopholes, Injustice, & the “Advanced Recycling” Myth
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Loopholes, Injustice, & the “Advanced Recycling” Myth

The report exposes misinformation spread by the fossil fuel industry about advanced recycling, chemical recycling, and other toxic and climate-damaging technologies that melt, boil, and burn plastic waste. Just Zero’s report focuses on the American Chemistry Council’s extensive lobbying efforts to create state law loopholes that help these facilities evade public oversight and environmental protections, and provide financial support for advanced recycling.

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An Introduction to Plastics and Toxic Chemicals
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An Introduction to Plastics and Toxic Chemicals

The health and environmental impacts of plastics are a global crisis. Scientific evidence shows that we have broken through the “planetary boundaries” for chemical and plastics pollution, meaning that production and emissions may be threatening the stability of the entire global ecosystem. To best understand what plastics pollution is, one must understand what plastic is: a material made from carbon (fossil fuels) and chemicals. Plastics do not exist without chemicals, and harmful chemicals are released at every phase of the plastics life cycle – from oil extraction to plastics production, transport, use, and disposal.

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Field Measurements Reveal Exposure Risk to Microplastic Ingestion by Filter-Feeding Megafauna
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Field Measurements Reveal Exposure Risk to Microplastic Ingestion by Filter-Feeding Megafauna

Per day, a krill-obligate blue whale may ingest 10 million pieces of microplastic, while a fish-feeding humpback whale likely ingests 200,000 pieces of microplastic. For species struggling to recover from historical whaling alongside other anthropogenic pressures, our findings suggest that the cumulative impacts of multiple stressors require further attention.

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Invisible, Unbreakable, Unnatural: PFAS Contamination of U.S. Surface Waters
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Invisible, Unbreakable, Unnatural: PFAS Contamination of U.S. Surface Waters

While PFAS compounds are believed to be ubiquitous in U.S. waterways, no nationwide surface water quality survey exists. As a result, the levels and effects of PFAS are unknown for many rivers, streams, lakes, and other U.S. surface waters that serve as drinking water sources, recreational waters, and fisheries. To address this troubling lack of information about the presence of, and dangers posed by, PFAS in U.S. surface waters, Waterkeeper Alliance contracted with Cyclopure, Inc., a materials science and environmental engineering firm headquartered in Illinois, to help conduct a monitoring project in which we worked with more than 100 Waterkeeper groups across the United States on an unprecedented initiative to test U.S. surface waters for PFAS contamination.

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The Price of Plastic Pollution: Social Costs and Corporate Liabilities
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The Price of Plastic Pollution: Social Costs and Corporate Liabilities

Plastics harm people, the environment, and the economy (“social costs”). Some social costs will inevitably turn into compensation claims against the plastics industry (“corporate liabilities”), which may present these claims to their insurers. In this report, for the first time, we provide quantitative estimates of both the social costs and the corporate liabilities emerging from all forms of plastic-related pollution.

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It’s as If They’re Poisoning Us’: The Health Impacts of Plastic Recycling in Turkey.
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It’s as If They’re Poisoning Us’: The Health Impacts of Plastic Recycling in Turkey.

Plastic recycling in Turkey is harming the health of many people and degrading the environment for everyone, Human Rights Watch said in a report released today. The 88-page report, “‘It’s as If They’re Poisoning Us’: The Health Impacts of Plastic Recycling in Turkey,” documents the consequences of the Turkish government’s ineffective response to the health and environmental impacts of plastic recycling on the right to health.

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Tracking Trends in Advanced/Chemical “Recycling”
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Tracking Trends in Advanced/Chemical “Recycling”

In 2020, GAIA released an alert identifying an alarming trend: legislators were introducing bills to promote the expansion of so-called “chemical recycling” (also known as “advanced recycling”, “waste-to-fuel”, “waste-to-plastic,” “plastic transformation,” and “plastics renewal”), eight of which had been signed into law. This unproven waste management strategy is endorsed by the plastic industry via its lobbying arm, the American Chemistry Council. This alert is an update on that trend, which the petrochemical industry has accelerated.

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Raman Microspectroscopy Detection and Characterisation of Microplastics in Human Breastmilk
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Raman Microspectroscopy Detection and Characterisation of Microplastics in Human Breastmilk

The evidence of microplastics (MPs) in human breastmilk, coupled with the previous discovery of these microparticles in the human placenta, represents a great concern, since it impacts the extremely vulnerable population of infants. In fact, the chemicals possibly contained in foods, beverages, and personal care products consumed by breastfeeding mothers may be transferred to the offspring, potentially exerting a toxic effect. Hence, it is mandatory to increase efforts in scientific research to deepen the knowledge of the potential health impairment caused by MP internalisation and accumulation, especially in infants, and to assess innovative, useful ways to reduce exposure to these contaminants during pregnancy and lactation.

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