PVC: The Most
Toxic Plastic
by Pamela Lundquist and Aisha Ikramuddin
Adapted from original material in The Green Guide #23 and #59
http://www.thegreenguide.com and Checnet
The worst plastic, from both an environmental and health standpoint, is
polyvinyl chloride, or PVC, commonly known as vinyl. It is found in a wide
variety of products, from food packaging to children's toys, plumbing and
building materials to medical devices, but in every case alternatives to it
exist.
Everyday Encounters With PVC
PVC food
packaging can include plastic trays in boxed cookies or chocolates, candy
bar wrappers, and bottles. Cling
wraps , especially the kind used commercially to wrap meats, cheeses and
other foods, can also be PVC. Unfortunately, this means that many people are
exposed to plasticising chemicals through food wrapping every day.
Traces of toxic chemicals, known as adipates and phthalates
(pronounced "tha-lates"), used to soften PVC can leak out into foods.
The risk of leaching is especially high with fatty foods and at higher
temperatures .
PVC is also commonly used in teethers and soft
squeeze toys for young children, beach balls, bath toys, dolls and other
products, such as knapsacks, raincoats, and umbrellas. Health concerns for
children who play with soft PVC toys centre once again on the toxic softeners
known as phthalates.
In May, 2001, Greenpeace released a report
which examined the level of phthalates and other hazardous chemicals in children's products and household items and found high levels of phthalates in
many cases.
More PVC products
Of 4.5 million tonnes of polyvinyl chloride (PVC) resin produced annually in
the U.S., 60 percent is used in construction. The most prevalent use of PVC in
construction is for piping
of water, gas and sewer drainage. Vinyl is used in 66 percent of all
American kitchens as flooring.
Other construction uses include: window frames, doors, wire sheathing, imitation
leather, furniture and vinyl
wallpaper .
Many common household products and office supplies are made of PVC plastic,
from PVC-covered paper clips to felt-tip pens, vinyl Venetian blinds and shower
curtains, to wastepaper baskets. Unfortunately, most plastics used for packaging
and consumer products are not labelled, with the exception of bottles (see
below).
Harm to Humans in PVC Manufacturing
The production of plastic accounts for the single largest use of chlorine
and PVC is the most common of all chlorinated plastics. Vinyl chloride, the
chemical used to make PVC, is a known human carcinogen, according to the World
Health Organization's International
Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC). Workers in PVC manufacturing
facilities and residents of surrounding communities can be affected by exposure
to these chemicals. Some studies have found higher rates of testicular cancers
and a rare form of liver cancer among workers in PVC plants. These
cancer-causing chemicals and lead,
the nerve-damaging metal often added to PVC, have contaminated water, soil and
air around these facilities, which are often located in poor communities.
Trashing the Food Chain
The manufacture of PVC and PVDC (polyvinylidene chloride, a close relative of
PVC) also creates and disperses dioxins,
which include the most toxic man-made chemical known. Released into air or
water, dioxins
enter the food chain, where they accumulate in fatty tissues of animals,
including humans. In fact, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency estimates a
1 in 1000 chance of contracting cancer from dioxin
exposure through a typical American diet. Dioxin may also affect children's
development and damage immune functions. PVC can generate dioxin again when it
is incinerated as household or medical waste.
The Final Insult: It's Less Recyclable
Because it contains a variety of additives and lacks a uniform composition,
PVC is far less recyclable than other plastics. Its quality degrades after only
two or three "cycles." Recycling operations are burdened by having to
carefully sort out PVC since it melts into corrosive gases at lower temperatures
than other plastics contaminating them, ruining equipment and causing health
concerns. Greenpeace has identified PVC as the least recycled of the six or so
major common plastics used in consumer, household and construction projects. The
EPA estimates that less than 0.5% of total post-consumer PVC was recovered or
reprocessed in 1994.
Just say "No" to PVC
The only way to avoid PVC is to identify
it first! On packaging, look for the #3 or the letters "PVC,"
often found next to or in the three-arrow "recycling" symbol. For other PVC
products, you'll have to ask the manufacturers what materials were used.
Fortunately, some companies are changing their own consumption patterns. For
example, IKEA is no longer using PVC in the manufacture of their furniture, wall
coverings and textiles.
It may seem that we cannot get along without PVC these days, but in all cases
alternatives
exist. And as we learn more about the negative impacts of PVC, on our
individual health and the environment, we can reject PVC products and actively
seek out other options in all aspects of our lives.
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