Science X's Phys.org site describes a report about the harm from tire particles, which account for about a third of all microplastic contamination in the environment. Unlike other types of plastic, tire particles are smaller, have greater chemical complexity, and different behavior in ecosystems. Thus the call is for them to be placed in a new, separate enviromental category.
The study, published in the journal Environmental Research, highlights the gap in current knowledge about the environmental presence, transportation, and toxic impact of these particles. The authors have identified ten priority research questions across four key themes: environmental detection, chemical composition, biotic impacts, and regulation.
The research brought together an interdisciplinary network of experts from countries including the U.K., U.S., Norway, Australia, South Korea, Finland, Austria, China, and Canada. Their findings underscore the need for a standardized framework to quantify and manage TPs and their leachates, especially as the global presence of these contaminants rises.
A second study is being carried out on the effects from tire chemicals and particles on marine life in UK waters.
(Score: 4, Informative) by ikanreed on Thursday November 21, @06:37PM (1 child)
You do? Okay. I hope you don't mind I'm not using academic sources, because those are harder to pull a single sentence citation from.
Light pollution: [eschooltoday.com]
Noise pollution: [iberdrola.com]
As to particulate pollution, this very summary we're discussing tells us 30% of environmental microplastics are from tires. It doesn't mention the road dust that makes up a substantial part of other air pollutants, but it does.
(Score: 3, Insightful) by JoeMerchant on Thursday November 21, @06:56PM
Our house is roughly 2km from the nearest expressways... there are homes built less than 200m from the 10+ lanes of 120+kph endless traffic. Nevermind the noise, how can they possibly think that breathing the crap that blows off that road, not only from the pavement and tires, but exhaust emissions as well, can possibly be acceptable in the long term? I mean, even with the windows always closed, homes still have significant air infiltration carrying the dust and soot.
🌻🌻🌻 [google.com]