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Environment

One Great Big Plastic Hassle

By Jane Akre, Conscious Choice. Posted February 19, 2007.


Disturbing health trends indicate our passion for plastic may be threatening our reproductive survival.
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In the seminal 1967 film, The Graduate, baby-faced Dustin Hoffman was told the wave of the future -- "Plastics." The lucrative career tip slipped on the QT to young Benjamin the day of his graduation bore no cautionary message about the veritable Pandora's Box the petrochemical plastics industry had opened in the post-war era some twenty years before the film's setting. The overzealous Plastic Man knew the only thing he needed to know: The world would always be hungry for plastic.

That celluloid prediction has proved right on target. Cheap, durable and convenient, plastic has been the country's chosen miracle-material since World War II. When added to polyvinyl chloride (PVC), the petroleum-based industrial chemicals in plastic -- chief among them plasticizers such as phthalates (THAHL-ates) -- make our upholstery comfier and our pipes more flexible. To keep up with the world's affection for all things plasticized, the U.S. produces a billion pounds of phthalates a year.

Today, phthalates are one of the top offenders in a group of 70 suspected endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) that we spray in our homes and yards and use in our makeup, nail polish, detergents, flame retardants, plastic bottles, metal food cans and even children's toys.

When we're done with these products, we flush them down our sinks or burn them in our incinerators, where their runoff filters into our national waterways. Even if you eschew plasticized products in your personal lives, it's impossible to avoid contamination; EDCs are in the bodies of every man, woman, child and fetus in the U.S.

A scan of the usual green media suspects turns up a lot of material on this silent phenomenon. Beyond EDCs, public waterways are contaminated with growth hormones and antibiotics from cattle feed, residual hormones from birth control products and other medicines, waste chemicals and pharmaceuticals. These substances can pass intact into the water supply through conventional sewage treatment facilities, dumps and landfills, or wash off into surface water and even percolate into ground water from animal waste fertilizers contaminated with traces of such compounds. And yet the subject remains largely under the public radar.

Pioneer zoologist Theo Colborn began following the chemical trail early on. In her landmark book, Our Stolen Future (Dutton, 1996; Plume 1997 paperback), Colborn reported countless examples of reproductive disorders among wildlife -- from sterility in bald eagles to small genitalia in male alligators. After tracing the animals' disorders to chemical exposure, Colborn suggested that EDCs profoundly affect one of the body's main communication networks -- the endocrine system -- by either mimicking natural hormones or blocking their uptake to the body's receptor sites.

Short-circuiting hormones can disturb everything from human development and behavior to reproduction and immunity. And scientists believe even the tiniest hormone variation at certain critical points in fetal development can have a profound effect on a child's future health.

Disturbing public health trends are bearing out these grim theories. Maida Galvez, M.D., a New York-based pediatrician, often talks to parents concerned by the accelerated rate of their daughters' sexual development. "I've seen the onset of breast budding as early as the age of six," Dr. Galvez says, noting that normal breast development begins to occur around ages ten to 11.

To date there has been little research in the area of "precocious puberty," as it's called, but Galvez is currently part of a multicenter study of 1,200 adolescent girls to determine if exposure to the hormone disruptor family of phthalates is behind the trend.

A much-publicized 2005 study was the first to show the connection between phthalate exposure and incomplete genital development. Dr. Shanna Swan's study, published in Environmental Health Perspectives (August, 2005), showed that pregnant women with higher urine concentrations of some phthalates were more likely to give birth to sons with "phthalate syndrome" -- incomplete male genital development -- a disorder previously seen only in lab rats. Swan's findings support the hypothesis that prenatal phthalate exposure to levels found in the general U.S. population can adversely affect the reproductive tract in male infants.

Environmental exposure to EDCs is the suspected cause of declining male testosterone levels over the past two decades, as well as the declining male birth rates in industrial areas such as Seveso, Italy, and the Dow Chemical Valley in Sarnia, Ontario.


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See more stories tagged with: plastics, endocrine disruptors, reproduction

Jane Akre is trying to find sustainable business models for freelance journalism after a 25 year career in the mainstream media which ended with a whistleblower lawsuit against Fox, foxbghsuit.com.

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View:
Plastic - Not so Fantastic
Posted by: seamus on Feb 19, 2007 1:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hear hear!
I'm in Africa right now where up till recently all the waste would have been consumed by animals.
Sensibly enough. they don't eat plastic so there are huge piles of plastic bags everywhere. Yet people look at me strangely in shops when i refuse them.
Back home i get charged 15c for each plastic bag, this piece of legislation has cut plastic bag use by 90%.
It's time we went back to reusable packaging.

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» RE: Plastic - Not so Fantastic Posted by: brasilaron
» RE: Plastic - Not so Fantastic Posted by: dorantherook
You don't have to sacrifice plastic for reproductivity. LEGALIZE HEMP 4 PLASTIC !
Posted by: maxpayne on Feb 19, 2007 5:04 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hemp replaces petroleum all the way. Hemp manufactured plastics are BIODEGRADABLE. People, you don't have to sacrifice plastic for reproductive safety. Instead, the author would be better off fighting to LEGALIZE HEMP and leading the way for hemp manufactured plastics if she would do a simple google search for

hemp plastics

Better yet, here's a site she should take a few minutes to look at

http://www.hempplastic.com

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» RE: Dissing semi-colons Posted by: Artaraxl
"For more better buying habits, see sidebar"
Posted by: Amy27605 on Feb 19, 2007 5:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What sidebar?

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» LINK FOR SIDEBAR Posted by: chuckville
Second the Motion to Legalize Hemp. Other Notes
Posted by: american on Feb 19, 2007 6:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The reason hemp is not already replacing plastics or paper production systems that destroy the environment is because of the cost to those who own the plastics and paper industiries (and everything else) are invested in it. It may make sense for the planet. It may make sense for the people. But it doesn't make sense to the bottom line. This is capitalism folks. Capitalism requires centralized ownership and production - and for individuals not to easily be able to manufacture substitutes (compete). Illegalizing marijuana takes care of this problem for the capitalists very well. And this scheme is failing our society because the needs of capitalists are being placed, due to treachery, far ahead of the needs of democracy.

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» No. Posted by: JoshuaLudd
It's good to see you in print.
Posted by: andyw on Feb 19, 2007 6:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm a fan of your work and saw you in "The Corporation."

As long as you are out here doing stories like this, "they" didn't win.

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All the more reason...
Posted by: JoshuaLudd on Feb 19, 2007 7:56 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
.. all the more reason industrialism and consumerism have failed.

Indigenous peoples survived for literally thousands of years with their lifestyles. Ours is killing us after 50 years.

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Chemical Society
Posted by: benzene on Feb 19, 2007 8:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Humans are, more or less, nothing more than tottering sacks of chemicals in the first place, so it is only natural that we would seek to augment the messiness of our own chemical nature with chemicals of our own making.

But in the meantime, take some more chemicals!

Are you concerned that your little boy is too full of antiandrogenic chemicals to become virilized to the full extent that he otherwise would? Then shoot the kid up with some extra testosterone (warning: acne, aggressiveness, shrinking testicles), aromatase inhibitor (warning: not guaranteed to work), or luteinizing hormone (warning: may exacerbate effect)!

Think that your breasts haven't developed to their fullest capacity? Then shoot up some human chorionic gonadotropic (warning: may induce nausea), prolactin (warning: may stimulate lactation in addition to breast growth), or oxytocin (warning: addictive)!

Do you suspect that your metabolism is too slow? Then take some extra thyroxine (warning: may cause eyes to bulge out, irritability, shakiness, persistent feeling of cold, and trouble sleeping)!

Do you feel fat? Then perhaps some extra glucagon (warning: may mimic and/or cause diabetes) is right for you! Shed those pounds away as the breakdown of glycogen, lipids, and proteins is stimulated and converted to energy!

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» RE: Correction Posted by: benzene
Male diseases - a wake up call
Posted by: SayBlade on Feb 19, 2007 8:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A wake up call on this subject is not enough. To drive this message home, a loud campaign of what the plethora of plastics has done to male sexual performance. This should be targetted at the 20 to 50 year olds and not be about progeny on the horizon. When they realise that no blue diamond shaped pill or its like will correct the problem, they will begin to understand that it is time to DO SOMETHING!

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Strange
Posted by: Gaubladt on Feb 19, 2007 8:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Could this be the corporatists solution to global warming? I would have thought that it would have been a toxic virus coctail.

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No Human on Earth Needs Nail Polish
Posted by: veggiegrrrl on Feb 19, 2007 8:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No Human on Earth Needs Nail Polish or a vast majority of the cosmetics and chemicals we use every day in our "civilized"society. Yes, "they" have to stop producing the nasties, but we have to stop buying.

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» but but but... Posted by: JoshuaLudd
» RE: but but but... Posted by: veggiegrrrl
Plastics: Here, there and everywhere
Posted by: Leadbyexample on Feb 19, 2007 9:08 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is a good article at the right time. Life as we know it would be different without plastics, just look at autos today, lots of plastics and black smoke during car fires. I would say in autos for instance, plastic might replace steel for overall weight reduction and better fuel economy. I asked the question years ago about using Styrofoam (extruded polystyrene) when starting to build very energy efficient homes, which damaged the environment more, the production of extruded polystyrene or building a home that wasted energy for the duration? I used the styrofoam, built the efficient homes and still use the product today. I believe over time the blowing agent used in the manufacture has been changed to be more green. Many plastics like PVC are inexpensive and have flame retardant properties so they are used in electrical applications, reducing the use of PVC may require revisiting building and electrical codes or going back to steel. Paper or plastic? For food shopping I take my own cloth bag given to me as a new food co-op member along with paper bags in my collection. The food co-op gives a 5 cent discount (green patch) for each recycled bag you use. I would like to see more about plastics and hear from posters, are they all bad or some worse than others, what about plastic
recycling?

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ORIGINAL LINK WITH SIDEBAR MATERIAL
Posted by: chuckville on Feb 19, 2007 9:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here's the original article, complete with Sidebar.

http://consciouschoice.com/2007/02/plastichassle.html

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"Better dying through chemistry"; certain dying through global warming.
Posted by: monkeywrench on Feb 19, 2007 10:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Rachel Carson, in her book "Silent Spring," tried to warn us, more than 40 years ago, of the dangers of chemicals dumped into the environment; and even she did not know the full extent of the problem beyond pesticides, her concern at the time.

That we have done so little to address this problem for 40 years after the publication of "Silent Spring" gives me little hope that we will move fast enough to head off our newest and most threatening problem, global warming. We don't just wait to lock the barn door until after the horse has run away; we wait until after the runaway horse has died of old age

Pray that we change our ways before we die, as well; we do not have 40 years to screw around this time.

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The Great Pacific Garbage Patch ...
Posted by: shanaza on Feb 19, 2007 1:30 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
is something most people are unaware of - it is composed mostly of plastics and is at least the size of Texas. From Natural History Magazine ...
http://preview.tinyurl.com/2zzund

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Smart Plastics Guide link
Posted by: anniedine on Feb 19, 2007 3:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
http://www.agobservatory.org/library.cfm?refid=77083

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Help???
Posted by: Shey on Feb 19, 2007 4:03 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Can some friendly, computer savy person tell me why I can't follow any of the links posted in the "comments"? My cursor doesn't turn into an "arrow" when I point to them.
Thanks.

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» RE: Help??? Posted by: Sushi
Plasma Converter?
Posted by: lessbread on Feb 19, 2007 6:24 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Popular Science recently published this article on converting garbage into electricity: The Prophet of Garbage: Joseph Longo's Plasma Converter turns our most vile and toxic trash into clean energy—and promises to make a relic of the landfill. The story seemed to me quite a puff piece, light on facts, heavy on praise. Here are a couple of salient assertions about this technology from the article (the more important ones imo): A Startech machine that costs roughly $250 million could handle 2,000 tons of waste daily, approximately what a city of a million people amasses in that time span., “We’ll generate 160 megawatts a day from the garbage,” Hillestad says, “but we’ll consume only 40 megawatts to run the plant.. Here's a link to Startech Environmental Corp.

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» RE: Plasma Converter? Posted by: NumberSix
» RE: Plasma Converter? Posted by: lessbread