The chemical industry is subjecting us — and all the other species with whom we share this planet — to an uncontrolled experiment to which we never consented
Almost 45 years ago, I co-led a report titled Our Chemical Society for the City of Toronto’s Department of Public Health, for whom I then worked.
At that time, it was estimated, there were 60,000-100,000 chemicals in commercial use, with 1,000 new chemicals introduced annually. Of these, 34,000 chemicals were on the U.S. EPA’s 1978 Toxic Effects List and there were 1,400 pesticides used in North America. The study assessed whether we have passed the planetary boundary for “novel entities.” These are “new substances, new forms of existing substances and modified life forms,” things of which nature — including we humans — has no experience and not much adaptive capacity.
In our 1981 report, we expressed concern in particular about the problem of ecotoxicity: the dispersal of harmful pollutants throughout the environment . Because of inadequate testing and population health monitoring and research, a commission on pollution and health, established by The Lancet, suggested in 2017 that there are large categories of pollutants for which we lack knowledge of their actual health impacts.
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