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America
• Manufactured chemicals – 30 million tonnes a year • Plastic pollution of oceans – 8mt/yr • Hazardous waste – 400 mt/yr • Coal, oil, gas etc – 15 gigatonnes (billion tonnes) a year • Lost soil – 75 Gt/yr • Metals and materials – 75 Gt/yr • Mining and mineral wastes - <200 Gt/yr • Water (mostly contaminated with above wastes) – 9 trillion tonnes a year.¡°Industrial toxins are now routinely found in new-born babies, in mother¡¯s milk, in the food chain, in domestic drinking water worldwide. They have been detected from the peak of Mt Everest (where the snow is so polluted it doesn¡¯t meet drinking water standards) to the depths of the oceans, from the hearts of our cities to the remotest islands.¡°The mercury found in the fish we eat, and in polar bears in the Arctic, is fallout from the burning of coal and increases every year.¡°There is global concern at the death of honeybees from agricultural pesticides and the potential impact on the world food supply, as well as all insect life - and on the birds, frogs and fish which in turn depend on insects.¡±Mr Cribb says an issue of chemical contamination largely ignored by governments and corporations is that chemicals act in combination, occur in mixtures and undergo constant change. ¡°A given chemical may not occur in toxic amounts in one place – but combined with thousands of other chemicals it may contribute a much larger risk to the health and safety of the whole population and the environment.¡±Medical science is increasingly linking issues such as obesity, cancers, heart disease and brain disorders such as autism, ADHD and depression to the growing volume of toxic substances to which humans are exposed daily.¡°Despite attempts to regulate chemical use, only 21 out of 144,000 chemicals have so far been banned. In countries such as the United States, attempts are apparently under way to roll back chemical regulation, exposing the population to ever-greater health risks.¡±Mr Cribb says solutions to the threat of global poisoning exist, but require the co-operation of consumers, government and industry worldwide.¡°First, we need a new Human Right – a right not to be poisoned. Without such a right, there will never again be a day in history when humans are free from man-made poisons.¡°Second we need a global alliance of consumers who will reject toxic products or products made with toxic processes – and give industry the economic incentive to switch to ¡®green chemistry¡¯ and other safer systems.¡°Our communities need to adopt ¡®zero waste¡¯, where nothing is discarded but all substances are re-used and toxic ones made safe.¡±¡°People need to understand that these poisons are only released because we as consumers send our dollar demands to industry to make things as cheaply as possible. This takes no account of the damage to human life and health. So we are all, in a sense, getting away with murder.¡°If consumers demand safe, healthy, green products and are willing to pay industry a little more to make them safely, we can cleanse our planet within a generation.¡°We all end up paying chemical toxicity one way or another. It¡¯s a simple choice – pay at the supermarket, or pay at the hospice.¡± Surviving the 21st Century describes what humanity as a whole must do, and what individuals can do to turn back the toxic tide.More information: Publisher: Dr Sher Saini, Springer International, New York, email: Sherestha.Saini@springer.com Author: Julian Cribb, +61 418639245 or Julian.cribb813@gmail.com
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