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Plastic Chemicals Scientists Found Hundreds of Toxic Chemicals in Recycled Plastics

Source: University of Gothenburg Reading Time: 2 min |

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When scientists examined pellets from recycled plastic collected in 13 countries they found hundreds of toxic chemicals, including pesticides and pharmaceuticals. Because of this, the scientists judge recycled plastics unfit for most purposes and a hinder in the attempts to create a circular economy.

Plastic recycling facilities are located all over the world. But the plastic that is extracted contains hundreds of chemicals, many of which are dangerous to people and the environment.
Plastic recycling facilities are located all over the world. But the plastic that is extracted contains hundreds of chemicals, many of which are dangerous to people and the environment.
(Source: Greenpeace)

Delegates, scientists and health and environmental advocates from around the world are gathering in Nairobi, Kenya for the third session of the Plastics Treaty Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee (INC-3). There scientists will urge delegates to heed the latest science showing that because toxic chemicals are used to make all plastics, and plastics will adsorb other chemicals during use, there are no plastics that can be deemed safe or circular.

“Plastic recycling has been touted as a solution to the plastics pollution crisis, but toxic chemicals in plastics complicate their reuse and disposal and hinder recycling,” says Professor Bethanie Carney Almroth, of the University of Gothenburg.

In a recently published study in Data in Brief via ScienceDirect, led by Carney Almroth, plastic pellets from plastic recycle plants in 13 different countries in Africa, South America, Asia and Eastern Europe were found to contain hundreds of chemicals, including numerous highly toxic pesticides.

In total, 491 organic compounds were detected and quantified in the pellets, with an additional 170 compounds tentatively annotated. These compounds span various classes, including pesticides, pharmaceuticals, industrial chemicals, plastic additives.

The plastic pellets are used as raw material to manufacture new plastic products. But no one has control over what the pellets consist of.
The plastic pellets are used as raw material to manufacture new plastic products. But no one has control over what the pellets consist of.
(Source: Bethanie Carney Almroth)

There are few regulations on chemicals in plastics, and international trade in plastics waste complicate this issue. In a correspondence published this month in the prestigious journal Science researchers from the University of Gothenburg, IPEN, Aarhus University, and the University of Exeter noted that: “The hazardous chemicals present risks to recycling workers and consumers, as well as to the wider society and environment. Before recycling can contribute to tackling the plastics pollution crisis, the plastics industry must limit hazardous chemicals.” More than 13 000 chemicals used in plastics with 25 % classified as hazardous. Scientists state that “no plastic chemical [can be] classified as safe.”

Professor Bethanie Carney Almroth brings a clear message to the meeting in Nairobi: “Numerous studies show that hazardous chemicals can accumulate even in relatively close-loop plastic recycling systems. We need to rapidly phase-out plastic chemicals that can cause harm to human health and the environment.”

References: A dataset of organic pollutants identified and quantified in recycled polyethylene pellets; Data in Brief; DOI:10.1016/j.dib.2023.109740

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