| Persistent
Organic Pollutants (POP's) are
toxic substances composed of organic chemical compounds and mixtures.
POP's are products and byproducts of human industry, which are persistent
in the environment. Which means they are substances that resist
photolytic, chemical and biological degradation. They enter the air, travel
long distances on air currents and then return to earth. POPs generally
have low water solubility and high lipid (fat) solubility, which means
they tend to bioaccumulate in fatty tissues of living organisms.
These substances magnify by factors of many thousands as they move up
the food chain. POPs are also highly toxic, having the potential
to injure human health and the environment at very low concentrations.
We are living in
a chemical soup! Every
person alive today carries approximately 250 chemicals within her or
his body, chemicals that did not exist prior to 1945. This is
referred to as the "body burden", and is our common legacy from the
process of development and industrialization. About 100,000 chemicals
have entered into the market since 1945, and it is estimated that 75,000
of them remain in commercial use today. A startling fact about
these chemicals is that most remain untested for their safety in humans
and other species. Only about 1.5% to 3% (about 1,200 to 500 chemicals)
have been tested for carcinogenicity. Moreover, chemical testing
tends to study one chemical at a time, whereas real-life exposure is,
in fact, coming from a broad spectrum of chemicals that may interact
or have additive effects. |
| The Dirty Dozen! The twelve POPs under scrutiny are: Dioxins, furans, polychlorinated biphenyl's (PCBs), DDT, chlordane, heptachlor, toxaphene, hexachlorobenzene, aldrin, dieldrin, endrin, and mirex. |
Other Links regarding POP's and the POP's
Treaty
Environmental
Media Services - Fast Facts
STOCKHOLM CONVENTION ON PERSISTENT
ORGANIC POLLUTANTS (POPs)
Nature - FOC: it's everywhere
EPA
- The Foundation for Global Action on Persistent Organic Pollutants: A United
States Perspective
The Dirty Dozen - Persistent Organic
Pollutants
Rachel's Environmental Page
- The POP's Treaty
WHO - Persistent Organic
Pollutants (POP)
EPA - Persistent
Organic Pollutants
EPA -
Database of Sources of Environmental Releases of Dioxin Like Compounds in
the United States
US EPA’s List of Persistent,
Bioaccumulative and Toxic Chemicals and Pollution Prevention
IPEN - The International POPs Elimination Network
Greenpeace
Exposes POPs Hotspots
Report
Recommends Steps to Reduce Dietary Dioxin Exposure
Persistent
Organic Pollutants & Reproductive Health
How Persistent Organic
Pollutants Threaten the Natural Environment and the Future of Indigenous Peoples
TOXIC
ALERT US Toxic Legacies
Pesticide
Action Network Updates Service (PANUPS) - POPs Treaty In Force Today - May
17, 2004
Unep.org
- Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants Coming into Force
- 17 May 2004
Children's Environmental
Health Network - Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs)
Oceana
- Ocean Threats: Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs)
Panna.org
- Demise of the Dirty Dozen 1995 Chart
Dioxin Links
Dioxin -
Not Getting It
EPA NCEA
- Dioxin And Related Compounds
EJNET.org - Dioxin Homepage
Fox
River Watch - PCBs, Dioxins, Furans and Mercury
GreenPeace
- ACHIEVING ZERO DIOXIN
Envirolink
- A Campaign of Reassuring Falsehoods, June 24, 1999
Chemical Substances in Housing Environment - English
Version OR the Japanese Version of Center
for Living Scientific Information
AlterNet.org -
The Dioxin Deception - April 3rd 2001
PureFood.org - Criminal Investigation
of Monsanto Corporation
Indigenous Environmental Network
(IEN) - DIOXIN - Toxins and Environmental Health
ABCNews.com
- Dioxin in Food Scientists Find 22 Times the Recommended Maximum Level in
Food
ScienceBlog.com
- Sunlight converts common anti-bacterial agent to dioxin. (Triclosan &
Chlorine)
City Pages
- Dioxin for Dinner
Ecobridge.org - Chemical
Pollution in Oceans & Food We Eat.
News You Can Use
Tracking
the Dirty Dozen across Nepal
I had always wondered what happened to date-expired or
'obsolete' agricultural and domestic pesticides, fungicides, herbicides, rodent
killers etc. Greenpeace recently offered me the opportunity to study and make
safe a warehouse in Nepal that is home to poisons that have been either withdrawn
from the market or have simply expired. It was an ordinary-looking warehouse,
stocking some of the deadliest chemical formulations in the business, situated
on the fields of the National Agricultural Research Council (NARC) premises
in Patan, a 20-minute drive across the river Bagmati from Kathmandu.
Dirty Dozen Pesticides:
Banned But Still Traded - Sweden: May 23, 2001
Unborn Babies Soaked in Chemicals,
Survey Finds July 14, 2005
![]()
This Page was last updated on July 30,2005
Counter added on June 22, 2003
Here are all the local links at this site "Ruth's Page - Endometriosis and Dioxin"
Who Is Ruth B? | Ruth's Blog | Hidradenitis Suppurativa | Veterans | Coalbed Methane | HS Awareness || the Press-Tribune | Tampon Survey | H.R.2900 | POP's Treaty | Endometriosis | | Fibromyalgia | Environmental Issues | Voice Your Opinion | Contact the Media | Just for Fun | | Endo-Links | Fibro-Links | Traditional Treatments | Alternative Treatments | Tampons | | Acupuncture | Herbs | Progesterone/ Wild Yam Creams | Ruth's Opinion | Teens "Our Future" | Discussion Board | Petition Corner | Playtex Tampons Tested for Dioxin | Get Politically Involved! |
Copyright © 1997-2004 Ruth's Page - Endometriosis & Dioxin - http://www.frontiernet.net/~ruthb.
The information on this page may not be reproduced, republished or mirrored on another webpage or website without prior written consent.