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The Minderoo-Monaco Commission on Plastics and Human Health.

Philip J LandriganHervé RapsMaureen CropperCaroline BaldManuel BrunnerElvia Maya CanonizadoDominic CharlesThomas C ChilesMary J DonohueJudith EnckPatrick FenichelLora E FlemingChristine Ferrier-PagèsRichard FordhamAleksandra Karolina GoztCarly GriffinMark E HahnBudi HaryantoRichard HixsonHannah IanelliBryan D JamesPushpam KumarAmalia LabordeKara Lavender LawKeith MartinJenna MuYannick R MuldersAdetoun MustaphaJia NiuSabine PahlYongjoon ParkMaria-Luiza PedrottiJordan Avery PittMathuros RuchirawatBhedita Jaya SeewooMargaret SpringJohn J StegemanWilliam A SukChristos SymeonidesHideshige TakadaRichard C ThompsonAndrea ViciniZhanyun WangElla WhitmanDavid WirthMegan WolffAroub K YousufSarah Alison Dunlop
Published in: Annals of global health (2023)
This Commission finds that plastics are both a boon to humanity and a stealth threat to human and planetary health. Plastics convey enormous benefits, but current linear patterns of plastic production, use, and disposal that pay little attention to sustainable design or safe materials and a near absence of recovery, reuse, and recycling are responsible for grave harms to health, widespread environmental damage, great economic costs, and deep societal injustices. These harms are rapidly worsening.While there remain gaps in knowledge about plastics' harms and uncertainties about their full magnitude, the evidence available today demonstrates unequivocally that these impacts are great and that they will increase in severity in the absence of urgent and effective intervention at global scale. Manufacture and use of essential plastics may continue. However, reckless increases in plastic production, and especially increases in the manufacture of an ever-increasing array of unnecessary single-use plastic products, need to be curbed.Global intervention against the plastic crisis is needed now because the costs of failure to act will be immense.
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