Skip to main content  
  Helping the environment one joke at a time, Grinning Planet. Click to go to home page. flying letter; click to go to signup page for free email version
Get GP free
via email !
 
   
       
 

Persistent Organic Pollutants

POPs, or Persistent Organic Pollutants, are long-lived and highly toxic chemicals.

Eco-Logical cartoon graphic of cube-shaped globe

POPs GO THE WEASELS
WHO KEEP MAKING THIS STUFF
Persistent Organic Pollutants Are the Baddest
of the "Bad Actor" Chemicals

We're just back from the baddest grammar lesson ever and we're chomping at the bite mark for the Bad Usage and Diction Seminar. In the meantime, let's explore an Apocalypse Now related to a Spraying Operation Then.

A 2003 study in the Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine found that even 30-40 years after the defoliant Agent Orange was used during the Vietnam War, people are still suffering from the consequences of its use. Jeez, doesn't this kind of stuff just break down after a while and become inert? Nope, not if it's a persistent organic pollutant, or POP.

In this case, the persistent organic pollutant is a dioxin contaminant in the Agent Orange known as TCDD. In the parts of Vietnam that were heavily spray during the war, the dioxin has remained so prevalent in the environment picture of rocks and water in Vietnam and food chain that it continues to get into residents of those areas today, even into children who weren't alive back then and were never sprayed with Agent Orange. Common health effects are skin problems and liver damage, but the witch's brew of herbicide/TCDD is also a probable carcinogen, and long-term exposure may cause developmental and reproductive problems. According to the US Environmental Protection Agency, there is currently no known safe level of dioxin exposure.

The good news is that only the regions of Vietnam that were heavily sprayed with Agent Orange continue to suffer the high levels of contamination. But there is a broader lesson here: POPs are bad news and are something we should eliminate from use—everywhere.

Here's another POPs quiz item for you: In a 2003 study of endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDC) found in the air and dust in 120 US homes, over 60 of the EDCs were found. Prevalent among them were three POPs—heptachlor, chlordane, and DDT—pesticides that have all been banned for years in the US. It's pretty obvious that these chemicals hang around for a LONG time without breaking down into less toxic compounds.

Persistent organic pollutants are also particularly troublesome because they often accumulate in the body fat of animals and people and can be are passed from mother to fetus.

Progress on eliminating persistent organic pollutants has been a mixed bag. Some POPs have already been banned by individual countries, but most are still used or manufactured SOMEWHERE on the planet. Because they can travel long distances via wind or water, their manufacture and use anywhere on the planet is a threat to living beings EVERYWHERE. To address the POPs issue on a global scale, the Stockholm Convention was crafted in 2001. It has been signed by over 150 countries and is well on its way to being ratified into law by the required minimum of 50 countries. The treaty initially only gives the boot to a dozen of the worst POPs, but it has mechanisms to allow the banishment of additional bad-actor chemicals in the future. This point has caused US chemical companies a certain level of consternation, and their political allies have worked to stall and weaken the treaty's ratifying legislation.

The chemicals to be eliminated by the Stockholm Convention are a good start, but ONLY a good start—many other chemicals are deserving of stricter control or elimination. With 71,000 chemicals registered for use, it seems that we ought to be able to figure out how to live without the worst of them—"la crème de la crud." So, does your senator support passage of the Stockholm Convention treaty?

Resources:

Publish date: 20-NOV-2003

More articles and resources on....

Get Grinning Planet free via email

   
GP ARTICLES RELATED TO
Persistent Organic Pollutants
   

OLD PESTICIDES NEVER DIE; THEY JUST WON’T EVEN FADE AWAY

DDT and Malaria
Will DDT Rise from the Dead?

THE KIDS ARE ALRIGHT —
OR MAYBE NOT

Pesticide Effects on Children

DO YOU LOVE THE SMELL OF AGENT ORANGE IN THE MORNING?

Agent Orange and Lawn Weed Killers  — What's the Connection?

   
 
Books for a Better Planet

 

Dying from Dioxin: A Citizen's Guide to Reclaiming Our Health

by Lois Marie Gibbs

(Non-Fiction)

 

DESCRIPTION

The name "Lois Gibbs" may sound familiar to some—she was the mother-turned-activist from the Love Canal disaster of the 1970s. She later formed the group Citizens Clearinghouse for Hazardous Waste (now known as the Center for Health Environment and Justice. With that group, Gibbs prepared a layman's guide on the what, where, how—and why-we-should-care—of dioxins. Unless you've been living in a plastic bubble, dioxins are around you and probably in you. Somehow, that seems worth knowing a little more about.

Get reviews or purchase info for this book at Amazon.com

See more Books for a Better Planet

Back to Reform School Joke  |  More articles, by category

 

FREE AUDIO CLIPS

free audio news clips link; image of zombie kid - DON'T BE A MAINSTREAM MEDIA DRONE! - Free MP3 news download at Grinning Planet
 

Hey, we don't pick
the Google ads!   – GP

 
CLICKS ON OUR ADS AND PURCHASES VIA OUR AMAZON LINKS HELP SUPPORT THIS FREE SITE... THANKS!

 

 


"The most alarming of all man's assaults upon the environment is the contamination of air, earth, rivers, and sea with dangerous and even lethal materials. This pollution is for the most part irrecoverable; the chain of evil it initiates not only in the world that must support life but in living tissues is for the most part irreversible. In this now universal contamination of the environment, chemicals are the sinister and little-recognized partners of radiation in changing the very nature of the world—the very nature of its life. "

— Rachel Carson


 

       
   >              
   > document gif Sign up to get Grinning Planet free by email, or get more info about it Email a link to this page to someone  
   > Issue Number 21
Copyright 2003 © Mark Jeantheau — All rights reserved.   More info
 
   
   
 
 
NEWS, ARTICLES, INFO

MP3 News Download
Video/Audio News Sites
Environmental News Sites
Investigative Journalism Sites

Environment/Energy/Economy
    - Articles/Resources By Topic
    - Articles By Date

Environmental Quotes
    - Funny Environmental Quotes
    - Peak Oil Quotes

Environmental Cartoons/Jokes
    - Environmental Videos/Animations

Environmental Products
Eco/Nature Greeting Cards

Grinning Planet Farm

FUNNY STUFF

Funny Jokes/Cartoons
    - Environmental Cartoons

Funny Animations/Videos
    - Environmental Animations/Videos

Funny Quotes
    - Environmental Funny Quotes

BOOKS

Environmental Books
Global Warming Books
Energy Books
Solar Energy Books
Peak Oil Books
Food-Gardening Books
Media Books

 
MUSIC & MOVIES

Environmental Movies
Environmental Songs
Environmental Music Videos

Album Reviews
Fun With Lyrics

ADMIN

Home Page
Search
Site Map
About Us
FAQs
Contact
Free Subscriptions
Unsubscribe
Privacy Policy