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In Remembrance
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Where chemicals are found in elevated concentrations
in biological fluids such as breast milk, they should be removed from the market immediately. UK Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution (2003) DDT, PCBs and dioxins are among the most hazardous – and most researched – man-made chemicals that have ever been brought into our environment. These, along with a number of other chlorinated pesticide chemicals, have been officially classified as POPs (persistent organic pollutants) under the global Stockholm Convention, and are largely banned from intentional production and use. This United Nations Convention was adopted in 2001 and entered into force in May 2004. Lost and found: persistent organic pollutants However, these twelve chemicals and chemical groups, sometimes referred to as the ‘dirty dozen’, make up only a small percentage of the total number of POPs. Many other persistent organic chemicals are still manufactured and used as ingredients in products for industrial, agricultural and/or consumer use. Chemicals like brominated flame retardants, alkylphenols, artificial musks and phthalates have become, as a result of their extensive use, widely distributed through the environment. They have even been found in regions and animals thought to be remote from sources of chemical contamination. For example, various brominated chemicals used as flame retardant additives in plastics and textiles have been found in the bodies of polar bears, wild falcons, sperm whales and human beings. Recent research indicates that hazardous chemicals can escape from consumer products during daily use, either directly to the air or in the form of contaminated dusts (Greenpeace Netherlands 2001 and 2003, Santillo et al. 2003a). Ongoing presence Though deliberate production and use of the ‘dirty dozen’ POPs have been banned or severely restricted worldwide, these chemicals, in common with many still in use, are persistent. They do not easily break down or biodegrade and therefore remain in the environment for many decades with the concentrations declining only slowly, if at all. In 2003, WWF conducted a study of chemical contaminants in the blood of 155 volunteers in the UK, a country where PCBs were banned as far back as the 1970s (WWF-UK 2003). The continuing presence of PCBs in their blood illustrates how long persistent chemicals remain in the environment and what we might expect from other persistent chemicals such as brominated flame retardants. © Topham/ANP
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with much love, lou_lou . . by . , on Flickr pd documentary - part 2 and 3 . . Resolve to be tender with the young, compassionate with the aged, sympathetic with the striving, and tolerant with the weak and the wrong. Sometime in your life you will have been all of these. |
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