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South China Morning Post
3 days ago
- South China Morning Post
Are microplastics damaging our brains and our health? Experts say they do not yet know
Tiny shards of plastic called microplastics have been detected accumulating in human brains, but there is not yet enough evidence to say whether this is doing us harm, experts have said. Advertisement These mostly invisible pieces of plastic have been found everywhere from the top of mountains to the bottom of oceans, in the air we breathe and the food we eat. They have also been discovered riddled throughout human bodies, inside lungs, hearts, placentas and even crossing the blood-brain barrier. The increasing ubiquity of microplastics has become a key issue in efforts to hammer out the world's first plastic pollution treaty, with the latest round of UN talks being held in Geneva next week. Microplastic waste is seen among sand at a beach. Photo: Shutterstock The effects that microplastics and even smaller nanoplastics have on human health are not yet fully understood, but researchers have been working to find out more in this relatively new field.


The Standard
5 days ago
- The Standard
New push to reach plastic pollution pact
Plastic waste has been found from the bottom of the seas to the tops of mountains © LAKRUWAN WANNIARACHCHI / AFP


South China Morning Post
31-07-2025
- South China Morning Post
Study estimates 2,300 died in Europe's first summer heatwave
A heatwave scorching Europe had barely subsided in early July when scientists published estimates that 2,300 people might have died across a dozen major cities during the extreme, climate-fuelled episode. The figure was supposed to 'grab some attention' and sound a timely warning in the hope of avoiding more needless deaths, said Friederike Otto, one of the scientists involved in the research. 'We are still relatively early in the summer, so this will not have been the last heatwave. There is a lot that people and communities can do to save lives,' said Otto, a climate scientist at Imperial College London. Heat can claim tens of thousands of lives during European summers, but it usually takes months, even years, to count the cost of this 'silent killer'. Otto and colleagues published their partial estimate just a week after temperatures peaked in western Europe. While the underlying methods were not new, the scientists said it was the first study to link heatwave deaths to climate change so soon after the event in question. People cool off at a fountain at Trocadero near Eiffel Tower during a heatwave on July 2 in Paris. Photo: AP Early mortality estimates could be misunderstood as official statistics but 'from a public health perspective the benefits of providing timely evidence outweigh these risks', said Raquel Nunes from the University of Warwick.