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The fundamental links between climate change and marine plastic pollution
Nature and the biosphere | Pollution, environmental and human health | Climate change
Science of The Total Environment - 1 February 2022
Date (DD-MM-YYYY)
29-09-2024 to 29-09-2025
Available on-demand until 29th September 2025
Cost
Free
Education type
Article
CPD subtype
On-demand
Description
Plastic pollution and climate change have commonly been treated as two separate issues and sometimes are even seen as competing. Here we present an alternative view that these two issues are fundamentally linked. Primarily, we explore how plastic contributes to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the beginning to the end of its life cycle. Secondly, we show that more extreme weather and floods associated with climate change, will exacerbate the spread of plastic in the natural environment. Finally, both issues occur throughout the marine environment, and we show that ecosystems and species can be particularly vulnerable to both, such as coral reefs that face disease spread through plastic pollution and climate-driven increased global bleaching events. A Web of Science search showed climate change and plastic pollution studies in the ocean are often siloed, with only 0.4% of the articles examining both stressors simultaneously. We also identified a lack of regional and industry-specific life cycle analysis data for comparisons in relative GHG contributions by materials and products. Overall, we suggest that rather than debate over the relative importance of climate change or marine plastic pollution, a more productive course would be to determine the linking factors between the two and identify solutions to combat both crises.
Contact details
Email address
Telephone number
+44 20 7424 4200

125 London Wall
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EC2Y 5AS