0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Food & Water Human Health Effects Marine & Wildlife Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Addressing microplastics in drinking water in the global plastics treaty – Gaps, challenges and opportunities

Cambridge Prisms Plastics 2025 1 citation ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 53 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Leili Abkar, Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker Tony R. ‎Walker

Summary

Researchers analyzed the United Nations Global Plastics Treaty draft texts and found significant gaps in addressing microplastic contamination of drinking water. The study identified deficiencies in standardized terminology, monitoring methods, and enforceable targets related to microplastics in water supplies. The authors call for stronger provisions in the treaty to protect global drinking water quality from microplastic pollution.

Polymers
Study Type Environmental

Abstract The escalating presence of microplastics (<5 mm) in drinking water presents urgent environmental and health challenges, yet the United Nations Environment Programme’s (UNEP) Global Plastics Treaty draft texts, including UNEP/PP/INC.5/4 and the Chair’s Text, lack robust provisions to address this issue. This Letter to the Editor analyzes deficiencies in the treaty’s approach, identifying critical gaps in standardized terminology, globally consistent monitoring methodologies, comprehensive source control and enforceable international regulations. Leveraging insights from California’s innovative microplastics monitoring framework, which employs spectroscopy-based detection and provisional health thresholds, we highlight scalable solutions for global policy. Key obstacles include technological disparities, economic reliance on plastic production, limited toxicological data and geopolitical barriers to unified action. We propose targeted strategies for the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee (INC-5.2), including adopting precise microplastics definitions, establishing universal detection protocols, regulating both primary and secondary microplastic sources and supporting research and capacity-building in low-resource regions. These measures aim to enhance the treaty’s ability to mitigate microplastic pollution in drinking water, fostering science-driven global cooperation to protect ecosystems and public health.

Sign in to start a discussion.

Share this paper