Plastics, the Environment and Society: Current Consensus and Future Directions

In less than 60 years, plastics have transformed our daily lives. Usage is increasing and now exceeds 330 million tonnes per annum. In this concluding chapter we summarise current understanding about the benefits and concerns of plastics usage and look to future priorities, challenges and opportunit...

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Main Authors: Thompson, Richard C., Pahl, Sabine
Format: Book Part
Language:unknown
Published: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/9781788013314-00177
https://books.rsc.org/books/edited-volume/chapter-pdf/1588791/bk9781788012416-00177.pdf
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spelling crroyalschem:10.1039/9781788013314-00177 2024-03-24T09:00:11+00:00 Plastics, the Environment and Society: Current Consensus and Future Directions Thompson, Richard C. Pahl, Sabine 2018 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/9781788013314-00177 https://books.rsc.org/books/edited-volume/chapter-pdf/1588791/bk9781788012416-00177.pdf unknown The Royal Society of Chemistry Plastics and the Environment page 177-187 ISBN 9781788012416 9781788012416 9781788016605 9781788013314 book-chapter 2018 crroyalschem https://doi.org/10.1039/9781788013314-00177 2024-02-26T16:24:22Z In less than 60 years, plastics have transformed our daily lives. Usage is increasing and now exceeds 330 million tonnes per annum. In this concluding chapter we summarise current understanding about the benefits and concerns of plastics usage and look to future priorities, challenges and opportunities. It is clear that plastics bring many societal benefits and offer the potential for further advances in medical and technological applications, as well as carbon reductions. However, it is also widely acknowledged that current production, use and disposal of plastics is not sustainable. Our understanding of the issues associated with end of life plastics has increased considerably over the last decade. It is now clear that plastic debris has accumulated on a global scale and is present in considerable quantities even in remote locations such as the arctic and deep sea. Plastic debris is frequently encountered by wildlife, often with harmful if not fatal consequences. There are emerging concerns about the impacts of nanosized plastic fragments and preliminary evidence that large items of litter can have negative consequences for human wellbeing. Public and policy interest in the topic is unprecedented and funding is being made available to address the issue. However, while the suite of potential solutions is well recognised, there is no one size fits all solution. In the current thirst for action, a major challenge is matching the most appropriate solutions to particular aspects of the problem. In addition, we need to consider the role of society and the processes of social perception and influence amongst a range of actors. This is critical because, unless the efficacy of solutions is properly evidenced and understood, there is a significant risk that interventions taken in haste will not be socially acceptable and/or may lead to unintended negative consequences. Book Part Arctic Royal Society of Chemistry Arctic 177 187
institution Open Polar
collection Royal Society of Chemistry
op_collection_id crroyalschem
language unknown
description In less than 60 years, plastics have transformed our daily lives. Usage is increasing and now exceeds 330 million tonnes per annum. In this concluding chapter we summarise current understanding about the benefits and concerns of plastics usage and look to future priorities, challenges and opportunities. It is clear that plastics bring many societal benefits and offer the potential for further advances in medical and technological applications, as well as carbon reductions. However, it is also widely acknowledged that current production, use and disposal of plastics is not sustainable. Our understanding of the issues associated with end of life plastics has increased considerably over the last decade. It is now clear that plastic debris has accumulated on a global scale and is present in considerable quantities even in remote locations such as the arctic and deep sea. Plastic debris is frequently encountered by wildlife, often with harmful if not fatal consequences. There are emerging concerns about the impacts of nanosized plastic fragments and preliminary evidence that large items of litter can have negative consequences for human wellbeing. Public and policy interest in the topic is unprecedented and funding is being made available to address the issue. However, while the suite of potential solutions is well recognised, there is no one size fits all solution. In the current thirst for action, a major challenge is matching the most appropriate solutions to particular aspects of the problem. In addition, we need to consider the role of society and the processes of social perception and influence amongst a range of actors. This is critical because, unless the efficacy of solutions is properly evidenced and understood, there is a significant risk that interventions taken in haste will not be socially acceptable and/or may lead to unintended negative consequences.
format Book Part
author Thompson, Richard C.
Pahl, Sabine
spellingShingle Thompson, Richard C.
Pahl, Sabine
Plastics, the Environment and Society: Current Consensus and Future Directions
author_facet Thompson, Richard C.
Pahl, Sabine
author_sort Thompson, Richard C.
title Plastics, the Environment and Society: Current Consensus and Future Directions
title_short Plastics, the Environment and Society: Current Consensus and Future Directions
title_full Plastics, the Environment and Society: Current Consensus and Future Directions
title_fullStr Plastics, the Environment and Society: Current Consensus and Future Directions
title_full_unstemmed Plastics, the Environment and Society: Current Consensus and Future Directions
title_sort plastics, the environment and society: current consensus and future directions
publisher The Royal Society of Chemistry
publishDate 2018
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/9781788013314-00177
https://books.rsc.org/books/edited-volume/chapter-pdf/1588791/bk9781788012416-00177.pdf
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_source Plastics and the Environment
page 177-187
ISBN 9781788012416 9781788012416 9781788016605 9781788013314
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1039/9781788013314-00177
container_start_page 177
op_container_end_page 187
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