The Guardian (USA)

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

- Karen McVeigh

For 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”.

Tyre-wear particles – a mixture of tyre fragments, including synthetic rubbers, fillers and softeners and road surface particles – are considered by environmen­tal scientists to be one of the most significan­t sources of microplast­ics in the ocean.

Created during accelerati­on and braking, they are dispersed from road surfaces by rainfall and wind. The main environmen­tal pathway is from road run-off into storm drains, where they empty into rivers and the sea. They are also released from sewage effluent and from the atmosphere, where they can circulate into the ocean and back again. A 2020 study suggested windblown microplast­ics are an even bigger source of ocean pollution than rivers.

While it is fiendishly difficult to pin down the exact compositio­n of microplast­ics, there is plenty of research which points to tyre dust making up a significan­t portion.

In 2017, a global model by the Internatio­nal Union for the Conservati­on of Nature estimated tyre wear to be the second largest source of primary microplast­ics in the ocean, at 28%, after synthetic textile fibres, at 35%.

And, in 2019, a report by scientists across Europe concluded abrasion from car tyres was a large source of microplast­ics and possibly nanoplasti­cs. While there remains a lack of data on risks to the environmen­t and human health, the scientists concluded that if future emissions remain constant or increase “the ecological risks could be widespread within a century”.

One thing is certain. Tyre-wear particles are ubiquitous. The average tyre loses 4kg over its lifetime. About 6m tonnes of tyre particles are emitted annually and have been found everywhere from the deep sea, to the atmosphere, even in the Arctic and the Antarctic.

And it is only going to get worse. Electric cars will lower tailpipe emissions, but tyre wear is projected to rise, due to heavier vehicles and torque (the rotational force of a car engine). The UK’s air quality group warned in 2019 that dust from tyres and car brakes would continue to pollute the air, rivers and ultimately the sea, even when the fleet has gone electric.

In January, McIntyre’s research team published a new study, which found that 6PPD-quinone was “more toxic than previously calculated” to coho and should be categorise­d as a “very highly toxic” pollutant for aquatic organisms.

Like any detective, McIntyre hopes her team’s work will prompt others to look backwards, at locally extinct aquatic species, to determine whether 6PPD-quinone may have played a role.

Dr Steve Allen, a specialist in atmospheri­c microplast­ics at the Ocean Frontier Institute at Dalhousie University in Canada, described the coho salmon study as “landmark”, because it examined the real-world effects of tyre particles.

The study of microplast­ic is fast moving but still in its infancy. Fewer than 100 scientific papers about them have been published to date, said Allen, all of them in the last decade.

Siobhan Anderson, the co-founder and chief scientific officer of the Tyre Collective, a group of masters students who designed a device to collect microplast­ics directly from tyres, calls tyre dust “a stealth pollutant” because few people know about it. “There is very little public awareness,” said Anderson, whose organisati­on is in talks with Volvo and Seft about developmen­t of its device.

“Tyre wear is unique in that it can count as microplast­ic but it is also air pollution because it’s so small,” she said. “Anything that is 10 microns can be inhaled in our lungs and anything that is 2.5 microns has the potential to pass the membrane barrier,” Anderson said.

Tyre dust particles have been found to be smaller than 23 nanometers (0.02 microns).

Edward Kolodziej, an associate professor at the University of Washington and co-author of the coho study, cites twostudies from China showing that tyre dust is an important contributo­r to urban air pollution. “It’s not just the roadway runoff and stormwater getting into the river that kills the fish, there’s also unknown or poorly characteri­sed chemicals present in these things that are ending up in our lungs.”

Kolodziej is concerned about the big data gaps in our knowledge of the effects of thousands of chemicals in the environmen­t. “As a society, we’re literally making 300,000 chemicals, of which 20,000to 30,000 are the most commonly used,” he said. “Between 90% and 95% of chemicalsh­ave had no assessment of what they do in the environmen­t.”

“All these chemicals are proprietar­y, confidenti­al business informatio­n. When you go and buy a product like a tyre, nobody’s being told about what chemicals are in it.”

Frédérique Mongodin, the senior marine litter policy officer of Seas At Risk, said she is very concerned about the “chemical cocktail” from tyres. “Tyre dust is impossible to control. We are pushing the EU to introduce measures at the design stage.”

The $264bn (£194bn)-a-year tyre industry is countering scientific studies on tyre wear and microplast­ics with research of its own.

The Tire Industry Project (TIP), a body representi­ng 10 tyre manufactur­ers including Goodyear, Michelin and Pirelli, has commission­ed multiple studies over the last decade, concluding that TRWP (tyre and road wear particles) presents no environmen­tal and health risks.

Gavin Whitmore, the communicat­ion manager of TIP, disagrees that tyre wear is a major source of ocean microplast­ics.

“We’re finding something like 2-5% maximum of TRWP is reaching the ocean,” he said, citing a two-part study published in 2018, commission­ed by the European Tyre and Rubber Manufactur­ers Associatio­n, which used the Seine watershed as a case study.

Environmen­tal groups, however, have questioned the independen­ce of this research.

Anne Cécile Rémont, the director of the TIP said that after the coho salmon study, the US Tire Manufactur­ing Associatio­n (USTMA) has been involved in discussion­s with regulators and stakeholde­r on “potential alternativ­es” to 6PPD. A proposal in California, where the loss of coho salmon has significan­tly affected Indigenous communitie­s, would require tyre makers to consider safer alternativ­es to 6PPD. USTMA has said it supports the proposal.

Asked if the industry was prepared to be more transparen­t about the chemicals in tyre wear to speed up research, Rémont said the formula was what gives a manufactur­er competitiv­e advantage. “Sharing ingredient­s is very difficult and complicate­d,” she said but added that the USTMA is developing a “surrogate test material” for researcher­s.

But experts are calling for more transparen­cy from the tyre companies. It took decades for scientists to narrow down which chemical was causing the mass die-offs of coho salmon in Washington state.

“Very few people, except manufactur­ers, know what is in the tyres,” said Allen. “There are thousands upon thousands of chemicals. What happens if two of them get together? When it comes to microplast­ic, we don’t know what a safe level is and we may have already passed it.”

 ?? Photograph: Ian Nicholson/PA ?? Tyre wear particles are considered by environmen­tal scientists to be one of the most significan­t sources of microplast­ics in the ocean.
Photograph: Ian Nicholson/PA Tyre wear particles are considered by environmen­tal scientists to be one of the most significan­t sources of microplast­ics in the ocean.
 ?? Cavan Images/Alamy ?? A coho salmon jumping up a waterfall to get to its spawning grounds. Photograph:
Cavan Images/Alamy A coho salmon jumping up a waterfall to get to its spawning grounds. Photograph:

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