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Study warns irreversible environmental impact due to plastic pollution

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Study warns irreversible environmental impact due to plastic pollution
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London: A study by an international team of researchers warned that the current level of plastic emission globally could create irreversible environmental effects.

According to the study
published in the journal Science, plastic pollution is a global threat, and actions to drastically reduce emissions of plastic to the environment are "the rational policy response."

The study's lead author Matthew MacLeod, Professor at Stockholm University in Sweden remarked that plastic emissions are trending upward even though awareness about plastic pollution among scientists and the public has increased significantly in recent years.

The team argued that solutions currently on offer, such as recycling and cleanup technologies, are not sufficient, and that we must tackle the problem at its root.

Mine Tekman, a doctoral researcher at the Alfred Wegener Institute in Germany took note of the limitations on the globally promoted technological solutions for recycling to remove plastic from the environment.

"As consumers, we believe that when we properly separate our plastic trash, all of it will magically be recycled. Technologically, recycling of plastic has many limitations, and countries that have good infrastructures have been exporting their plastic waste to countries with worse facilities," Tekman was quoted as saying by IANS.

Tekman added that reducing emissions requires drastic actions, like capping the production of virgin plastic to increase the value of recycled plastic, and banning the export of plastic waste unless it is to a country with better recycling.

The researchers said that plastic is a "poorly reversible pollutant", both because of its continuous emissions and environmental persistence. It accumulates in the environment when amounts emitted exceed those that are removed by cleanup initiatives and natural environmental processes, which occurs by a multi-step process known as weathering.

Plastic pollution could also act in conjunction with other environmental stressors in remote areas to trigger wide-ranging or even global effects.

"Right now, we are loading up the environment with increasing amounts of poorly reversible plastic pollution. So far, we don't see widespread evidence of bad consequences, but if weathering plastic triggers a really bad effect we are not likely to be able to reverse it," cautions MacLeod.

"The cost of ignoring the accumulation of persistent plastic pollution in the environment could be enormous. The rational thing to do is to act as quickly as we can to reduce emissions of plastic to the environment," he noted.

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TAGS:Plastic pollution
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