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Microplastics in the Environment: Much Ado about Nothing? A Debate

Global Challenges 2019 105 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Thomas Backhaus, Wagner, Martin

Summary

This paper documents a scientific debate on whether the risks of microplastics in the environment are overestimated, with one author arguing that current evidence does not support widespread ecological harm at environmentally relevant concentrations while the other argues the precautionary principle justifies concern.

This article documents a debate between the two authors on the issue of microplastics in the environment. It is sparked by a viewpoint published by G. Allen Burton, who argues that the risk of microplastics is overrated. The authors have started debating this notion on Twitter, but the format has quickly turned out to be too cumbersome to exchange arguments. It is thus decided to continue the conversation by exchanging letters published as preprints in roughly four-week intervals. In these contributions, a broad range of relevant issues are touched upon, including the differences in risk conceptions, risk communication in the attention economy, risk assessment in situations of scientific uncertainty, the need to test proper hypotheses, the problem of prioritizing environmental issues, the costs of action and inaction, the application of the precautionary principle or a strictly evidence-based approach for policy-making and, eventually, larger issues related to the Anthropocene. In hindsight, it is felt that this debate is rewarding because it made possible expressing and reflecting on the values and opinions in ways otherwise impossible in social media and standard scientific articles.

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