| Literature DB >> 32703909 |
Winnie W Y Lau1, Yonathan Shiran2, Richard M Bailey3, James E Palardy1, Ed Cook4, Martin R Stuchtey5,6, Julia Koskella5, Costas A Velis7, Linda Godfrey8, Julien Boucher9,10, Margaret B Murphy11, Richard C Thompson12, Emilia Jankowska5, Arturo Castillo Castillo13, Toby D Pilditch14, Ben Dixon5, Laura Koerselman5, Edward Kosior15, Enzo Favoino16, Jutta Gutberlet17, Sarah Baulch11, Meera E Atreya5, David Fischer5, Kevin K He11, Milan M Petit5, U Rashid Sumaila18, Emily Neil14, Mark V Bernhofen4, Keith Lawrence11.
Abstract
Plastic pollution is a pervasive and growing problem. To estimate the effectiveness of interventions to reduce plastic pollution, we modeled stocks and flows of municipal solid waste and four sources of microplastics through the global plastic system for five scenarios between 2016 and 2040. Implementing all feasible interventions reduced plastic pollution by 40% from 2016 rates and 78% relative to "business as usual" in 2040. Even with immediate and concerted action, 710 million metric tons of plastic waste cumulatively entered aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems. To avoid a massive build-up of plastic in the environment, coordinated global action is urgently needed to reduce plastic consumption; increase rates of reuse, waste collection, and recycling; expand safe disposal systems; and accelerate innovation in the plastic value chain.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32703909 DOI: 10.1126/science.aba9475
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728