Martin Wagner

174 Followers
86 Following
133 Posts
Plastics, people, planet. Hunting down toxic chemicals and #microplastics @NTNU in Norway.
Websitewww.biotox.de
A year in the making, we are happy to announce the launch of our state-of-the-science report on plastic chemicals.
Join us for the virtual launch on March 14th, 14:00 CET hosted by Geneva Environment Network.
Registration: https://plastchem-project.org
#INC4 #plasticstreaty #plasticpollution
PlastChem – State-of-the-science of hazardous chemicals in plastic

.@andersen_inger: People are disgusted by #PlasticPollution, so the negotiations of the #PlasticsTreaty cannot be endless and we need ambition. A systemic redesign of the plastic economy is the DNA of the solutions. #INC2

RT @[email protected]

Chemicals should only be used in which their function in specific products is necessary for health, safety, or the functioning of society - not simply because they are profitable.

New publication on #EssentialUse and chemical management in @[email protected]!
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.est.2c05932

🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/DrSCoffin/status/1619065713200861184

RT @[email protected]

The eerie beautiful photo of a detritic organoplastoid by Elizabeth Ellenwood now features our review paper with @[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected] on the front cover of the January issue of #ESPI
🥳🥳🥳

🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/KseniaGroh/status/1618345714605756416

Ksenia Groh on Twitter

“The eerie beautiful photo of a detritic organoplastoid by Elizabeth Ellenwood now features our review paper with @hanspeterarp @MattMacL @ZhanyunWang on the front cover of the January issue of #ESPI 🥳🥳🥳”

Twitter

Isn't it cool that in 2014 one could easily read all papers published on #microplastics?

Getting a bit nostalgic when re-reading @[email protected]' chapter in @[email protected] et al.'s Marine Anthropogenic Litter book...

RT @[email protected]

Pretty surreal to see our new study, which reveals Exxon's shockingly accurate global warming predictions, on the front page of BBC, NPR, The Guardian, etc. 🙃

Thank you to all the journalists covering our work.🙏

#ExxonKnew @[email protected] @[email protected]
http://bit.ly/ExxonKnew2point0

🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/GeoffreySupran/status/1613685905562148864

RT @[email protected]

.@[email protected] presenting on human health harm from #EDCs in plastics during an event sponsored by The Endocrine Society, @[email protected] and the governments of Uruguay and Switzerland. Learn more: http://bit.ly/3gK9iBQ @[email protected] #BeatPlasticPollution #PlasticsINC

🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/TheEndoSociety/status/1598032541805871104

Joint Statement Regarding Harms of BPA Exposure in EU

The Endocrine Society and the European Society of Endocrinology release a joint statement regarding the harms of exposure to BPA and the need for better regulation.

So, the fault line of the #PlasticsTreaty is whether countries prefer an approach that is bottom-up (national, loose rules) or top-down (global, binding rules). Balance needed. Many good insights from @[email protected], @[email protected], @[email protected], @[email protected].

RT @[email protected]

For Science Sunday we're reading "Development & application of a health-based framework for informing regulatory action in relation to exposure of microplastic particles in Calif drinking water"
https://microplastics.springeropen.com/articles/10.1186/s43591-022-00030-6
@[email protected] @[email protected] @[email protected]
#plasticstreaty

🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/IUCN_Plastics/status/1596862908163424256

Development and application of a health-based framework for informing regulatory action in relation to exposure of microplastic particles in California drinking water - Microplastics and Nanoplastics

Microplastics have been documented in drinking water, but their effects on human health from ingestion, or the concentrations at which those effects begin to manifest, are not established. Here, we report on the outcome of a virtual expert workshop conducted between October 2020 and October 2021 in which a comprehensive review of mammalian hazard studies was conducted. A key objective of this assessment was to evaluate the feasibility and confidence in deriving a human health-based threshold value to inform development of the State of California’s monitoring and management strategy for microplastics in drinking water. A tiered approach was adopted to evaluate the quality and reliability of studies identified from a review of the peer-reviewed scientific literature. A total of 41 in vitro and 31 in vivo studies using mammals were identified and subjected to a Tier 1 screening and prioritization exercise, which was based on an evaluation of how each of the studies addressed various quality criteria. Prioritized studies were identified largely based on their application and reporting of dose–response relationships. Given that methods for extrapolating between in vitro and in vivo systems are currently lacking, only oral exposure in vivo studies were identified as fit-for-purpose within the context of this workshop. Twelve mammalian toxicity studies were prioritized and subjected to a Tier 2 qualitative evaluation by external experts. Of the 12 studies, 7 report adverse effects on male and female reproductive systems, while 5 reported effects on various other physiological endpoints. It is notable that the majority of studies (83%) subjected to Tier 2 evaluation report results from exposure to a single polymer type (polystyrene spheres), representing a size range of 0.040 to 20 µm. No single study met all desired quality criteria, but collectively toxicological effects with respect to biomarkers of inflammation and oxidative stress represented a consistent trend. While it was possible to derive a conservative screening level to inform monitoring activities, it was not possible to extrapolate a human–health-based threshold value for microplastics, which is largely due to concerns regarding the relative quality and reliability of current data, but also due to the inability to extrapolate data from studies using monodisperse plastic particles, such as polystyrene spheres to an environmentally relevant exposure of microplastics. Nevertheless, a conservative screening level value was used to estimate a volume of drinking water (1000 L) that could be used to support monitoring activities and improve our overall understanding of exposure in California’s drinking water. In order to increase confidence in our ability to derive a human–health-based threshold value in the future, several research recommendations are provided, with an emphasis towards strengthening how toxicity studies should be conducted in the future and an improved understanding of human exposure to microplastics, insights critically important to better inform future risk assessments. Graphical abstract

SpringerOpen

RT @[email protected]

Our @[email protected] Letter is out, just in time for the global #PlasticTreaty negotiations #INC1! Led by @[email protected], we highlight the need to consider #PlasticChemicals to safeguard human & environmental health & realise the promise of #recycling.
https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adf5410

🐦🔗: https://twitter.com/MelanieBergma18/status/1595857281941241856