Updated: 20/12/2024
Environmental damage will be widespread within 100 years if microplastics continue to build up, the European academic advisory body SAPEA has said.
Its report, launched at The European Parliament, highlights a serious lack of knowledge about the future fall-out for people and the environment.
Dr Lesley Henderson, a Brunel University London media sociologist, said: “I knew that there was very little research that explores what the public understand about microplastics and risk.
Cultural change
“But I was surprised there are so many research gaps in the natural sciences. For example, how microplastics and nanoplastics are defined and measured can differ, and there are no standard measures for exposure and hazard.”
Dr Henderson’s insight will put policy makers in the picture about what messages people might take from what they hear, read and see about microplastics and risk.
Henderson continued: “We won’t solve the problem of plastic pollution without huge cultural and social change, and it is important to recognise this.
“So policymakers need to be aware of the messages coming through different media. This is even more important given the speed with which scientific stories can be diffused across social media.
“Media plays a vital role in bringing about positive societal change, so it’s important to work with media and be clear where there is uncertainty in the scientific evidence.”
The report has been handed over to the European Commission’s Group of Chief Scientific Advisors, who will use it to shape their scientific opinion on microplastics.
Professor Bart Koelmans, from SAPEA, said: “The evidence about nano- and microplastics remains uncertain and complex. But a lack of evidence for risk doesn’t mean we should assume that there is no risk.
“As our social science colleagues point out, it’s vital we communicate clearly about uncertainties in the evidence, rather than just assuming that everything is fine just because we don’t know for sure.”
This Article
This article is based on a press release from Brunel University, London. Read ‘A scientific perspective on microplastics in nature and society’ in full here