Plastic & climate ‘co-crises’

Plastic pollution is worsened by warming climate and must be stemmed, researchers warn
Katie Hill - Editor-in-Chief, My Green Pod
Orca emerging from the ocean at sunset with coast and birds

Increased toxicity from plastic pollution in a warmer climate is highly likely to be affecting whole ecosystems, with potentially disproportionate impacts on apex predators such as orcas.

A new review published in Frontiers in Science is calling for urgent action to avoid irreversible ecological damage by stemming the tide of microplastics entering the environment.

Solutions in common

Climate change conditions turn plastics into more mobile, persistent and hazardous pollutants. This is done by speeding up plastic breakdown into microplastics (microscopic fragments of plastic), spreading them considerable distances and increasing exposure and impact within the environment.

The issue is set to worsen as both plastic manufacturing and climate effects increase. Global annual plastic production increased 200-fold between 1950 and 2023.

The authors, from Imperial College London, urge eliminating non-essential single-use plastics (which account for 35% of production), limiting virgin plastic production and creating international standards for making plastics reusable and recyclable. 

‘Plastic pollution and the climate are co-crises that intensify each other. They also have origins—and solutions—in common. We urgently need a coordinated international approach to stop end-of-life plastics from building up in the environment.’

PROF. FRANK KELLY
Lead author, Imperial’s School of Public Health

Joint crises

The researchers conducted a comprehensive review of existing evidence that highlights how the climate crisis worsens the impact of plastic pollution. 

Rising temperatures, humidity and UV exposure all boost the breakdown of plastics.

At the same time, extreme storms, floods and winds can increase fragmentation as well as dispersal of plastic waste – six billion tonnes and rising – into landfill, aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems, atmospheric environments and food webs.

There are growing concerns about the persistence, spread and accumulation of microplastics that can disturb nutrient cycles in aquatic ecosystems and reduce soil health and crop yields.

They also adversely affect feeding, reproduction and the behaviour of organisms that are capable of ingesting them, should levels exceed safe thresholds.

‘Solutions require systemic change: cutting plastic at source, coordinated global policy such as the UN Global Plastics Treaty, and responsible, evidence-based innovation in materials and waste management.’

PROF. FRANK KELLY
Lead author, Imperial’s School of Public Health

Yesterday’s plastics

Microplastics can also act as ‘Trojan horses’ to transfer other contaminants like metals, pesticides and PFAS, or ‘forever chemicals’.

Climatic conditions may also enhance the adherence and transfer of these contaminants, as well as the leaching of hazardous chemicals such as flame retardants or plasticisers.

There is also historical plastic to consider. When ice forms in the sea, it takes up microplastics and concentrates them, removing them from the water.

However, as sea ice melts under warming conditions, this process could reverse and become a major additional source of plastic release.

Microplastics & marine species

Combined impacts when both stressors occur together are particularly apparent across many marine organisms.

Research into corals, sea snails, sea urchins, mussels and fish shows that microplastics can make them less able to cope with the rising temperatures and ocean acidification.

Filter-feeding mussels can concentrate microplastics extracted from the water, transferring this pollution to predators: effects like this can increase levels of microplastics higher in the food chain.

‘There’s a chance that microplastics – already in every corner of the planet – will have a greater impact on certain species over time. Both the climate crisis and plastic pollution, which come from society’s over-reliance on fossil fuels, could combine to worsen an already stressed environment in the near future.’

DR STEPHANIE WRIGHT
Co-author, Imperial’s School of Public Health

Species at these higher trophic levels are often already vulnerable to a host of other stressors, whose effects may be amplified by plastics.

For instance, a recent study found that microplastic-induced mortality in fish quadrupled with a rise in water temperature.

Another study showed that increased ocean hypoxia, which is also driven by warming, caused cod to double their microplastic intake.

Apex predators vulnerable

Apex predators such as orcas may be particularly susceptible to the double hit of microplastics and climate change.

These long-lived mammals are likely to experience significant microplastic exposure over the course of their lifetime.  

The potential loss of keystone species that shape the functioning of the wider ecosystem could have far-reaching implications. 

‘Apex predators such as orcas could be the canaries in the coal mine, as they may be especially vulnerable to the combined impact of climate change and plastic pollution.’

PROF. GUY WOODWARD
Co-author, Imperial’s Department of Life Sciences

Microplastics are also known to affect ecosystems on land, but these interactions are even more complex and harder to predict than for aquatic life. 

Action on microplastics

The evidence showing increased amounts, spread and harm of microplastics adds further impetus to calls for urgent action on plastic pollution.

The researchers say we must rethink the whole approach towards using plastics in the first place.

‘A circular plastics economy is ideal. It must go beyond reduce, reuse and recycle to include redesign, rethink, refuse, eliminate, innovate and circulate – shifting away from the current linear take–make–waste model.

DR JULIA FUSSELL
Co-author, Imperial

This review also demonstrates that integrating interactive effects of plastic pollution and climate stressors offers a way to steer, coordinate and prioritise research and monitoring, along with policy and action.

‘The future will not be free of plastic, but we can try to limit further microplastic pollution. We need to act now, as the plastic discarded today threatens future global-scale disruption to ecosystems.’

DR STEPHANIE WRIGHT
Co-author, Imperial’s School of Public Health

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