Hawaii will ban the sale of sunscreens containing oxybenzone and octinoxate, which have been found to be toxic to coral and algae. The ban would take effect in 2021, and wouldn't apply to prescription sunscreens, online purchases, or sunscreen brought from out of state.
Hawaii bans sunscreens with chemicals that damage coral reefs, but Australia reluctant to follow
But there is far less enthusiasm for a similar ban in Australia, with some experts questioning the evidence behind Hawaii's decision. [...] Hawaii's decision was partly based on a report from 2015.
[...] "It's still a matter of balancing our planet health with human health when we know that two out of three Australians will develop skin cancer in their lifetime," Cancer Council Australia CEO Sanchia Aranda said.
Professor Aranda said there was still no conclusive scientific evidence the chemicals caused coral bleaching. "If there was evidence for marine damage strongly and the TGA, who regulates sunscreen and the chemicals that go into sunscreen, believed that it was harmful, then we would also seek to support that," she said.
2015 study reported at UCF and NPR.
Toxicopathological Effects of the Sunscreen UV Filter, Oxybenzone (Benzophenone-3), on Coral Planulae and Cultured Primary Cells and Its Environmental Contamination in Hawaii and the U.S. Virgin Islands (DOI: 10.1007/s00244-015-0227-7) (DX)
(Score: 2) by Lester on Saturday May 05 2018, @06:28PM (1 child)
I can't see that evidence.
So? Bleach is toxic for human, but something similar is dropped in swimming pools every day. Everything depends on concentration. Is concentration of oxybenzone in the wild, near the coral reef, significant? That is the question. If the sum of use of sunscreens along the years has been like a drop of tea in a Olympic swimming pool then we are overreacting.
OK, it is toxic and should be replaced by other innocuous components. But if there is no immediate danger, banning right now, over the night, is a little... trying to be whiter than white.
It looks that nowadays overreacting is the new rule.
(Score: 2, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday May 05 2018, @09:34PM
> It looks that nowadays overreacting is the new rule.
Someone wrote "let's destroy markets: Tourism, sunscreeners, retailers." I think that's an overreaction, because there are other ingredients that can be used in sunscreens, and there are sunscreens already on the market that use those other ingredients without octinoxate or oxybenzone. Some people were already avoiding the ingredients that Hawaii is banning.