The black shit covering the snow? That's from #cars. But importantly, it's not just exhaust soot - it's also pieces of tire (as they wear down). Eg, #microplastics that will end up in the ocean and in our drinking water.
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Andres
in reply to Neil E. Hodges • • •Neil E. Hodges likes this.
Andres
in reply to Andres • • •https://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/pollution-microplastic-waste-tires-b2794350.html
"In recent times, tire wear particles have been found to account for about 45% of all microplastics in both terrestrial and aquatic systems."
"Researchers in 2020 found that more than half of the coho salmon returning to streams in Washington state died before spawning, largely because of 6PPD-Q, a chemical stemming from 6PPD, which is added to tires to help keep them from degrading."
The most frustrating thing about all this? Cities don't clear sidewalks, so more cars
One of the biggest microplastic pollution sources revealed – and it’s not straws or bags
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Andres
in reply to Andres • • •That article in particular focuses on filtering out tire wear particles AFTER they've entered the environment. Which is very much a band-aid, and it filters them AFTER we've breathed in the airborne particles.
We can stop them from ever being released by designing cities not for cars, but we need actual political leadership for that. Limiting/removing cars also comes with a ridiculous number of other benefits, too. Truly too many to count!
#BanCars
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in reply to Andres • • •legraLeGra
in reply to Andres • • •I’ve also got a friend who is a geochemist —
She has found another important road source of microplastics in rivers and estuaries are actually the road markings themselves which are no longer paint, but instead thermoplastics.
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Andres
in reply to legraLeGra • • •Twobiscuits🚴♂️ :graz:
in reply to Andres • • •@atthenius Most paint consists of synthetic polymers too, though. And thermoplastic markings, but also the ones that use very smelly solvents, last longer than paint. That's why they're used. Here in Graz we've been through the attempt to use water-based paint. It didn't work. The city can't repaint 1000 km worth of road markings on a 2-years' cycle, and that's what it needed.
The main particulate pollution from road runoff is from tyres. There's no way around collecting and treating the runoff from roads with heavy traffic. Separate drainage & treatment of road runoff is gradually being rolled out in Austria, in cities and along the highways.
legraLeGra
in reply to Andres • • •This is the exhaustive review article
https://www.epa.gov/sciencematters/where-rubber-meets-road-epa-researchers-study-environmental-and-health-impacts-tires
Where Rubber Meets the Road: EPA Researchers Study the Environmental and Health Impacts of Tires | US EPA
US EPA