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The global threat from plastic pollution

📅 July 1, 2021 👤 Matthew MacLeod, Hans Peter H. Arp, Mine Banu Tekman et al. 📖 Science 📊 2,700 citations

🤖 Plain-English Summary

Plastic pollution accumulating in an area of the environment is considered "poorly reversible" if natural mineralization processes occurring there are slow and engineered remediation solutions are improbable. Potential impacts from poorly reversible plastic pollution include changes to carbon and nutrient cycles; habitat changes within soils, sediments, and aquatic ecosystems; co-occurring biological impacts on endangered or keystone species; ecotoxicity; and related societal impacts.

🔑 Key Findings

  • Should negative outcomes in these areas arise as a consequence of plastic pollution, they will be practically irreversible.
  • Potential impacts from poorly reversible plastic pollution include changes to carbon and nutrient cycles; habitat changes within soils, sediments, and aquatic ecosystems; co-occurring biological impacts on endangered or keystone species; ecotoxicity; and related societal impacts.
  • The rational response to the global threat posed by accumulating and poorly reversible plastic pollution is to rapidly reduce plastic emissions through reductions in consumption of virgin plastic materials, along with internationally coordinated strategies for waste management.

💡 Why This Matters

These innovations can translate to real-world improvements in technology, infrastructure, and everyday tools.

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📋 Article Details

Category ⚙️ Engineering & Technology
Published Jul 01, 2021
Journal Science
Authors Matthew MacLeod, Hans Peter H. Arp, Mine Banu Tekman, Annika Jahnke
DOI 10.1126/science.abg5433
Citations 2,700
Source OpenAlex

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