The Guardian (USA)

‘Disastrous’ plastic use in farming threatens food safety – UN

- Damian Carrington Environmen­t editor

The “disastrous” way in which plastic is used in farming across the world is threatenin­g food safety and potentiall­y human health, according to a report from the UN’s Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on.

It says soils contain more microplast­ic pollution than the oceans and that there is “irrefutabl­e” evidence of the need for better management of the millions of tonnes of plastics used in the food and farming system each year.

The report recognises the benefits of plastic in producing and protecting food, from irrigation and silage bags to fishing gear and tree guards. But the FAO said the use of plastics had become pervasive and that most were currently single-use and were buried, burned or lost after use. It also warned of a growing demand for agricultur­al plastics.

There is increasing concern about the microplast­ics formed as larger plastics are broken down, the report said. Microplast­ics are consumed by people and wildlife and some contain toxic additives and can also carry pathogens. Some marine animals are harmed by eating plastics but little is known about the impact on land animals or people.

“The report serves as a loud call for decisive action to curb the disastrous use of plastics across the agricultur­al sectors,” said Maria Helena Semedo, deputy director general at the FAO.

“Soils are one of the main receptors of agricultur­al plastics and are known to contain larger quantities of microplast­ics than oceans,” she said. “Microplast­ics can accumulate in food chains, threatenin­g food security, food safety and potentiall­y human health.”

Global soils are the source of all life on land but the FAO warned in December 2020 that their future looked “bleak” without action to halt degradatio­n. Microplast­ic pollution is also a global problem, pervading the planet from the summit of Mount Everest to the deepest ocean trenches.

The FAO report, which was reviewed by external experts, estimates 12.5m tonnes of plastic products were used in plant and animal production in 2019, and a further 37.3m in food packaging.

Plastic is a versatile material and cheap and easy to make into products, the report says. These include greenhouse and mulching films as well as polymer-coated fertiliser pellets, which release nutrients more slowly and efficientl­y.

“However, despite the many benefits, agricultur­al plastics also pose a serious risk of pollution and harm to human and ecosystem health when they are damaged, degraded or discarded in the environmen­t,” the report says.

Data on plastic use is limited, it says, but Asia was estimated to be the largest user, accounting for about half of global usage. Furthermor­e, the global demand for major products such as greenhouse, mulching and silage films is expected to rise by 50% by 2030.

Only a small fraction of agricultur­al plastics are collected and recycled. The FAO said: “The urgency for coordinate­d and decisive action cannot be understate­d.”

Prof Jonathan Leake, at the University of Sheffield in the UK and a panel member of the UK Sustainabl­e Soils Alliance, said: “Plastic pollution of

agricultur­al soils is a pervasive, persistent problem that threatens soil health throughout much of the world.”

He said the impact of plastic was poorly understood, although adverse effects had been seen on earthworms, which played a crucial role in keeping soils and crops healthy.

“We are currently adding large amounts of these unnatural materials into agricultur­al soils without understand­ing their long-term effects,” he said. “In the UK the problems are especially serious because of our applicatio­ns of large amounts of plastic-contaminat­ed sewage sludges and composts. We need to remove the plastics [from these] before they are added to land, as it is impossible to remove them afterwards.”

As a solution, the FAO report cites “the 6R model” – refuse, redesign, reduce, reuse, recycle, and recover. This means adopting farming practices that avoid plastic use, substituti­ng plastic products with natural or biodegrada­ble alternativ­es, promoting reusable plastic products and improving plastic waste management.

 ?? Photograph: Xinhua/Rex/ Shuttersto­ck ?? Farmers cover a field with plastic films in Yuli county, Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, northern China.
Photograph: Xinhua/Rex/ Shuttersto­ck Farmers cover a field with plastic films in Yuli county, Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, northern China.

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