Tyre dust: the ‘stealth pollutant’ that’s becoming a huge threat to ocean life

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AE-NMidlands
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Tyre dust: the ‘stealth pollutant’ that’s becoming a huge threat to ocean life

#1

Post by AE-NMidlands »

https://www.theguardian.com/environment ... ocean-life
or decades, coho salmon returning from the Pacific Ocean to the creeks and streams of Puget Sound in Washington state to spawn were dying in large numbers. No one knew why. Scientists working to solve the mystery of the mass deaths noticed they occurred after heavy rains.

Toxicologists suspected pesticides, as the main creek they studied ran through a golf course. But no evidence of pesticides was found. They ruled out disease, lack of oxygen and chemicals such as metals and hydrocarbons.
The first real breakthrough happened when they tested actual runoff collected from a nearby road and exposed test salmon to it. The fish died within hours.

“The harder step was delving into what could be in that stormwater,” said Jenifer McIntyre, an assistant professor of aquatic toxicology at Washington State University, who has spent 15 years searching for what was killing the coho, an important species in the Pacific north-west.
It was when they tested car tyre particles – a poorly understood yet ubiquitous pollutant – that they knew they were on the right track. Using a parmesan grater atop a drill, they carefully shaved tiny fragments of tyre and soaked them in water.

“When we tested the tyres it killed all the fish,” said McIntyre. From there, they were able to identify the culprit: a toxic chemical known as 6PPD-quinone, the product of the preservative 6PPD, which is added to tyres to stop them breaking down. The pioneering study, published in 2020, has been heralded as critical to our understanding of what some describe as a “stealth pollutant”.
A new chemical to be aware of... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/6PPD says
A 2022 study also identified the toxic impact on species like brook trout and rainbow trout.[8] The published lethal concentrations are:[8] [9]
coho salmon: LC50 = 95 ng/L
brook trout: LC50 = 0.59 μg/L
rainbow trout: LC50 = 1.0 μg/L
95ng/l is 0.1 of a ppb!
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Mr Gus
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Re: Tyre dust: the ‘stealth pollutant’ that’s becoming a huge threat to ocean life

#2

Post by Mr Gus »

This fits in with my local council bin empty refusal (the wrong fast bio-degradable bs (bullsh** standard) compliance of what is commonly accepted for kitchen waste recycling...

My local council nerk replied today suggesting that as we don't have any free papers delivery coverage in this area we drive to our nearest station on the off chance of getting a free copy of the daily fails "metro" paper, or freeze waste & stick still solid waste chipped out of its container into our green bin ..this is why I'm moaning my ass off by dint of reply.

We are lucky to have" bev" in our household, getting a "free" paper may cost £5 in fuel (more for costed time) & all the pollutant sh--- that goes with it for the *green* bin.


Cause as much pollution as you want it's for an I'll thought do as i say (not as i do) green points based "cause" ..loads of tickboxes to fill.

"💩's

Fossil fuel use & other pollutants, ..but, greenwash.
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AE-NMidlands
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Re: Tyre dust: the ‘stealth pollutant’ that’s becoming a huge threat to ocean life

#3

Post by AE-NMidlands »

Mr Gus wrote: Wed Jul 27, 2022 12:20 am This fits in with my local council bin empty refusal (the wrong fast bio-degradable bs (bullsh** standard) compliance of what is commonly accepted for kitchen waste recycling...
My local council nerk replied today suggesting that as we don't have any free papers delivery coverage in this area we drive to our nearest station on the off chance of getting a free copy of the daily fails "metro" paper, or freeze waste & stick still solid waste chipped out of its container into our green bin ..this is why I'm moaning my ass off by dint of reply.
We are lucky to have" bev" in our household, getting a "free" paper may cost £5 in fuel (more for costed time) & all the pollutant sh--- that goes with it for the *green* bin.
Cause as much pollution as you want it's for an I'll thought do as i say (not as i do) green points based "cause" ..loads of tickboxes to fill. Fossil fuel use & other pollutants, ..but, greenwash.
https://www.theguardian.com/environment ... -recycling is a good long article about the problem and includes:
‘We haven’t been given the money to get it right’: why so much of the UK is rubbish at recycling

Despite our commitment to sustainable living, domestic recycling is getting worse. Who – or what – is to blame?
According to the latest Defra figures, released in May, the amount of household waste recycled in England actually fell by 1.5% in 2020 to an unimpressive (and below the EU minimum target of 50%) 44%.

Poor recycling performance seems to be something of a national trait across the UK. Northern Ireland’s domestic recycling dipped from 51% to 49% while Scotland fell from 45% to 41%. Wales is significantly bucking that trend. Its recycling rate rose to 56.5% (its municipal rate is 65%). In 2017, it was ranked third in the world (after Germany and Taiwan) by independent consultancy Eunomia
So why is so much of the United Kingdom so bad at recycling? Andy Rees, head of waste strategy for the Welsh government, said devolution, funding and close communication with councils have been key to their success – as is transparency. They have a website where people can track where recycling goes.
“We aspire to do good things but take advantage of being relatively small, and then we can all get around the table together with our local authorities and work out the way forward,” he said. “So to be fair to Defra, we have had advantages in Wales that devolution has brought us, and has allowed us to do quite well.”

The picture around England is far more disparate. Its worst performing local authority for household reuse, recycling and composting last year was Barrow-in-Furness borough council with 18%, Defra figures show. The best was St Albans city and district council, with 64%.

So if Andy Rees were suddenly given the brief to take on England too, what steps would he take? Food waste would be a big one, he said, and, crucially, so would something that has infuriated just about everyone in the country at some point or another: collecting the same materials across local authorities.
and a good last paragraph
Back in Brighton, Melanie Rees thinks there is a better, simpler solution than recycling. “The amount of energy that goes into recycling plastic for it to have possibly one more life before it’s burned is enormous. I want to say to people: you’ve really got to look at stopping buying some of this stuff.”
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spread-tee
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Re: Tyre dust: the ‘stealth pollutant’ that’s becoming a huge threat to ocean life

#4

Post by spread-tee »

Funding for local authorities has been squeezed by GOVT quite a lot since 2010, but at the same time central GOVT has mandated more responsibility to them, so it's the same old story. Run the Country on the cheap and it falls apart, or Austerity as Dave and George called it.

Desp
Blah blah blah
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