PCB News
Around the World
Arctic faces toxic time bomb
New Scientist
February 01, 2003
Fred Pearce
Fragile ecosystems like the Arctic could face many more years of
contamination from PCBs, despite international treaties banning their
use. That is the conclusion of a study into the fate of
polychlorinated biphenyls manufactured worldwide during much of the
20th century.
An estimated 1.3 million tonnes of PCBs were made between the 1930s
and 1990s around the world for use in the manufacture of pesticides,
lubricants and plastics. But an investigation funded by the European
Union to determine the fate of these hormone mimics has failed to
locate most of them. "We think we can account for perhaps 30 per cent,
absorbed by soils, coastal sediments or the deep ocean," says Kevin
Jones, an environmental scientist at the University of Lancaster. "But
the rest is a mystery."
Jones teamed up with scientists at the Norwegian Institute for Air
Research in Kjeller and analysed soil samples from 208 sites around
the world. They calculate that only around 21,000 tonnes of PCBs
persist in soils worldwide. This means hundreds of thousands of tonnes
of the chemical are missing -- probably sitting in factories or
lingering in old electrical equipment, says Jones. "Some has degraded
naturally, but we think the majority is still waiting to enter the
environment," he adds.
If the missing PCBs turn up, it could prove particularly disastrous
for Arctic countries. Once released into the environment, PCBs
evaporate and travel on the winds to cold countries where they
condense out in the cold air. The process, dubbed "global
distillation", has caused PCBs to accumulate in Arctic ecosystems, and
in particular in the body fat of mammals, such as polar bears, whales
and even humans. The birth of hermaphrodite polar bear cubs has been
blamed on the chemical.
While most industrialised countries stopped producing PCBs in the
1970s, 90 countries gathered in Stockholm in 2001 to sign a treaty
banning the substances. But Jones's study shows that contamination
could continue for a long time yet. "We still find that urban air
contains more PCBs than rural air, so we must conclude that the
chemicals are still being released into the environment," says Jones.
"The bad news is that there seem to be a great deal more PCBs than
anyone thought that have not entered the environment yet."
The good news is that Jones's study, which is published in the journal
Environmental Pollution (vol 121, p 75), also shows that agricultural
and forest soils are good at absorbing PCBs, providing some protection
for Arctic countries. Soils in temperate lands have captured most of
the PCBs released into the environment until now, says Jones.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information UK,
|