The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

Mascherine, an environmental bomb ready to explode

2021-03-12T16:20:28.607Z


(HANDLE) The masks: a plastic bomb ready to explode. Recent studies estimate that we use 129 billion globally every month, or 3 million per minute. Most are disposable made with plastic microfibers. With reports of improper disposal of these protective equipment rising, it is urgent to recognize this potential environmental threat and prevent it from becoming the next plastics issue to address. The event c


The masks: a plastic bomb ready to explode.

Recent studies estimate that we use 129 billion globally every month, or 3 million per minute.

Most are disposable made with plastic microfibers.

With reports of improper disposal of these protective equipment rising, it is urgent to recognize this potential environmental threat and prevent it from becoming the next plastics issue to address.

The event comes from a comment in the journal Frontiers of Environmental Science & Engineering, by scholars of the University of Southern Denmark.

The researchers explain that disposable face masks are plastic products that cannot be rapidly biodegraded but instead fragment into smaller plastic particles - micro and nanoplastics that spread through ecosystems.



The huge production is similar to that of plastic bottles, estimated at 43 billion per month, however, unlike the latter (of which about 25% is recycled), there are no official guidelines on the recycling of masks, which makes it more likely that they will be disposed of as solid waste.

The most recent and greatest concern concerns their realization with microsize plastic fibers (thickness from 1 to 10 micrometers).

When they spread to the environment, they can release more microplastics, easier and faster than loose plastics such as plastic bags, an impact that can be aggravated by the new generation ones, the so-called nanomasks.

The researchers point out that they do not know how the masks contribute to the large number of plastic particles detected in the environment, simply because there is no data.

"But we know - says Elvis Genbo Xu, author of the article - that, like other plastic debris, they can accumulate and release harmful chemical and biological substances, such as bisphenol A, heavy metals and pathogenic microorganisms. These can have indirect negative impacts on plants, animals and humans ".

Among the suggestions is to think of specific and standardized delivery systems for masks and to make biodegradable ones.

(HANDLE).


Source: ansa

All life articles on 2021-03-12

You may like

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.