Exponent Inc.

05/02/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 05/02/2024 15:30

Assessing the Breakdown of Plastics in the Environment

Exponent's Christopher C. White and 42 other scientists on the United Nation's Environmental Effects Assessment Panel have co-authored a paper in Global Change Biology. Their article explores the link between climate change and plastic waste; in particular, the team "assessed effects of UV radiation and interacting climate change factors on plastics, focusing on the durability of products as well as the production and dispersal of micro- and nano-plastic pollutants in the environment."

The paper notes a 2022 estimate of 400 million metric tonnes of plastics produced globally every year - a significant amount of which can be considered "unmanaged and ubiquitous" - that could be contaminating the natural environment. The article underlines the need for better understanding of the potential environmental fate of plastic debris and contaminants and their degradation into micro- and nanoplastics.

The authors cite the importance of the Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer to address and prevent rising rates of UV-B-driven photodegradation and fragmentation of plastics, explaining that "the complex, interactive effects of UV radiation and climate change, together with changes in feedstocks, will make plastic weathering less predictable in the future."