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How plastics are poisoning us
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The New Yorker: How plastics are poisoning us

1 min read

Plastics appear everywhere: from human placentas to chasms 36,000 feet beneath the ocean's surface. Will we ever be rid of them? Elizabeth Kolbert writes for The New Yorker.


In a nutshell:

Born in 1865 out of a quest to eliminate elephant ivory from the billiard ball supply chain, plastics are now being spewed forth at an annual production volume of over 800 billion pounds. As plastics break down into microplastics and disperse, they make their way to the most distant parts of our planet and infiltrate the internal organs of species up and down the food chain with toxic chemicals. No amount of recycling, reusing or repurposing is going to solve the plastics problem.

Key quote:

Kolbert presents a reality check from Matt Simon, the author of a book about microplastics: “So long as we’re churning out single-use plastic . . . we’re trying to drain the tub without turning off the tap. We’ve got to cut it out.”

Big picture:

Reducing plastic pollution cannot be seriously entertained without a commitment to reducing, if not eliminating, plastic production. That in turn would involve a winding down of the petrochemical industry at precisely the point in time when Big Oil, faced with an energy transition to renewables, is looking to plastics as one of the mainstays of future profits. The oil and gas industry, protected by massive political might and bankrolled by decades of record profits and willing financiers will not go quietly.

Read Elizabeth Kolbert's astute analysis inThe New Yorker.

About the author(s):

EHN Staff

Articles written and posted by staff at Environmental Health News

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