One scientist trying hard to save environmental justice data and tools from erasure during the Trump administration: my story for Yale https://e360.yale.edu/features/eric-nost-interview
Wednesday, March 12, 2025
Sunday, December 1, 2024
How to stop plastic pollution
This November-December, international delegates met to try to thrash out a treaty to end plastic pollution. Sadly, they couldn't agree on a draft text in time for their self-appointed deadline. But some good progress was made and work will continue in 2025. Meanwhile, here's my story for Nature on what individual countries are doing, policy-wise, to try to cut down on plastic.
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-03860-x
Image credit: ChatGPT 4 ("Draw a picture of a coastline clogged with plastic carrier bags")
Thursday, October 31, 2024
How to grow a forest
It takes more than just planting trees to grow a forest! Check out my Q&A with the author of Treewilding, for Yale.
https://e360.yale.edu/features/jake-robinson-interview
Image credit: ChatGPT 4
Friday, March 15, 2024
Nasty plastic
I have been reporting a lot about plastics this year, with the upcoming UN treaty against plastic pollution in the works and due to be completed by the end of 2024. I have been quite shocked by what I've been told.
One major issue is all the chemicals used in plastics -- both the monomer ingredients, and also additives like plasticizers or colourants, along with unintentionally added chemicals. There are a tonne of these. Some PVC products are known to be up to 70% phthalates by weight (a plasticizer that makes the PVC more flexible, many of which are endocrine disruptors that muck with reproductive systems and hormones). A lot of scientists I have spoken with are seriously concerned about all this: they opt for no plastic in their grandchildren's toys, avoid plastic water bottles and definitely don't ever microwave food in plastic containers.
In all my stories I have been scrambling to find a solid reference or report on plastic chemicals that I can refer to for definitive information and numbers. Now, finally, here it is! These researchers have done a quite epic job pulling together data on 16,000 chemicals. They find 4,200 are concerning, and 3,600 of these are not currently regulated at the global level. Bring on the plastic treaty to do so!
There are provisos. On the plus side, not all plastics leach concerning chemicals.
Different nations have different regulations, and some, especially in
Europe, have some good protections in place. Some chemicals wound up on
the "concern" list just because they're mobile (they move around a lot
and can escape the plastic easily) but aren't necessarily toxic. Some of
the chemicals on this list might not be in plastics at all anymore.
But on the down side, they found hundreds of concerning chemicals across all the major plastic types (not just PVC, but PET too for example). And there's so much missing data that the numbers might be higher; there might be a lot MORE toxic chemicals amongst the 16,000. That seems quite likely, actually: lots of known-to-be-bad chemicals have been replaced with different chemicals, which later turned out to also be bad. Many of the new ones on the list may be not-yet-proven bad.
Many people
have a simple solution in mind: instead of a list of baddies, let's have
a list of good chemicals (sustainable, non toxic, biodegradable) that
we CAN use in plastics. After all, we don't need hundreds or thousands
of different flame retardants. Simplifying and standardizing plastic
could help a lot with toxic exposure, and with recycling too.
My story for Nature: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-024-00805-2
Thursday, February 15, 2024
Goodbye to PVC?
But environmentalists and NGOs have been raising alarms about PVC for decades. Scientists have established that its precursor chemical is carcinogenic; that some of the additives used to make it flexible can muck with hormones; and that it can spew noxious compounds, especially when burned. It’s “the worst of the worst” when it comes to plastics, says Judith Enck, a policy expert with Beyond Plastics, a nonprofit based at Bennington College in Vermont. Now, vinyl’s heyday may finally be drawing to an end.
Read my story in Yale Environment 360
https://e360.yale.edu/features/pvc-plastic-un-treaty

Tuesday, November 21, 2023
Trying to end plastic pollution
UN delegates are trying to bash out a Plastics Treaty with the ambitious goal of ending plastic pollution. They met last week in Nairobi to mark the half-way point towards the treaty, which is supposed to be written and signed in 2024. But progress was frustratingly slow. People at the meeting said a few nations with fossil fuel interests were blocking progress, slowing things down and making the draft treaty just get longer instead of shorter. Sigh.
Here's my story for Nature: https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-03579-1
The scale of the problem has become epic. There is SO MUCH PLASTIC in our lives. I find it hard to imagine a world without plastic wrappers and packaging but that's where we're now trying to go...
In my view, hopefully the treaty will:
- set a legally-binding cap for how much virgin plastic the planet is allowed to make per year. (Some people are saying cap it at 2025 levels. Others say it needs to be waaay lower: Greenpeace says it should be 75% lower than 2019 levels. We shall see)
= list out chemicals of concern (like PVC) and work to phase them out. Apparently there are around 13,000 chemicals in plastics, of which many thousands are already known to be toxic. Sigh.
- set a requirement for USE of recycled plastics in new material (because the problem isn't how much plastic we collect to recycle, but what happens to it after it's recycled. Right now there just isn't much demand for it, because virgin plastic is cheap)
and more...
Some UN treaties are really specific about what things need to happen (like the Montreal Protocol, which killed off ozone-depleting substances). Others are pretty vague (like the Paris Agreement, which tells countries to set their own targets for greenhouse gas reductions). Scientists are hoping the Plastics Treaty (whatever it gets called in the end) will be ambitious, specific, legally binding... Fingers crossed!