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environmental policy

Celebrity chefs and forever chemicals

October 22, 2025 By EarthWise Leave a Comment

Celebrity chefs push back against banning PFAS from cookware

Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances – better known as PFAS – are a type of human-made chemicals that are found in a wide range of consumer and industrial products.  They don’t break down in the environment or in the human body, so they are often called forever chemicals.  They can contaminate drinking water sources and can get into the food supply.  PFAS chemicals have been linked to low birth weight, birth defects and developmental delays in infants, and an increased risk of some prostate, kidney, and testicular cancers.  PFAS can be found in the blood of almost every person in the United States.

PFAS chemicals are used in some food packaging, dental floss, and nonstick cookware.  Some states have taken action against the use of the chemicals.  Minnesota has a law that prohibits PFAS in cookware and 10 other types of products.  Several other states including New York, Colorado, Connecticut, Maryland, and Maine have passed laws banning specific uses of PFAS.

California has passed a bill that would phase out the use of PFAS for a range of products including nonstick cookware and celebrity chefs are joining forces to defend the use of the chemicals in pots and pans.  These include Rachael Ray, Marcus Samuelsson, and David Chang.  All of them endorse cookware products.

The chefs say that nonstick cookware using PFAS coatings are safe when used responsibly and that eliminating the use of the coatings would be a serious loss to restaurants and home cooks.  Opponents say that PFAS can end up in food when nonstick cookware overheats, is scratched or otherwise degrades.  In any case, manufacturing products containing PFAS causes significant pollution.

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California Wants to Ban ‘Forever Chemicals’ in Pans. These Chefs Say Don’t Do It.

Photo, posted January 31, 2018, courtesy of Quiet Hut via Flickr.

Earth Wise is a production of WAMC Northeast Public Radio

The human impact on oceans

October 21, 2025 By EarthWise Leave a Comment

Vast and powerful, the oceans have sustained human life around the world for millennia. They provide food, natural resources, and livelihoods, supporting countless communities and economies. But despite their size and resilience, the oceans are under increasing pressure from climate change and human activity, pushing them toward a dangerous threshold.

According to a new study led by researchers from UC Santa Barbara, the cumulative human impact on the oceans is forecasted to double by 2050, which is just 25 years from now.  These impacts include ocean warming, fisheries losses, sea level rise, acidification, and pollution.

The research team, which includes collaborators from Nelson Mandela University in South Africa, found that the tropics and poles will experience the fastest rate of change.  And coastal regions, where most human activity takes place, will bear the heaviest consequences of those changes. 

The research team calls the findings sobering – not only because the impacts are increasing, but because they’re increasing so quickly. 

The study, which was recently published in the journal Science, shows that ocean warming from climate change and reductions in marine biomass from overfishing are expected to be the two largest contributors to future ocean impacts.  If ecosystems cannot cope with these pressures, human societies will also feel the consequences.

But the research team stresses that it’s not too late. Stronger climate policies, better fisheries management, and protections for vulnerable habitats like salt marshes and mangroves could help slow or even reduce human impacts.

The research serves as both a warning, and a chance to act before it’s too late.

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Human impact on the ocean will double by 2050, UCSB scientists warn

Photo, posted July 11, 2018, courtesy of Ed Dunens via Flickr.

Earth Wise is a production of WAMC Northeast Public Radio

The U.N. meets about geoengineering

October 9, 2025 By EarthWise Leave a Comment

Geoengineering refers to a wide range of mechanical or chemical methods aimed at deliberately changing the global climate system.  It includes a number of unproven concepts, one of which is intentionally polluting the upper atmosphere with thousands of tons of artificial particles such as chemical sprays or mineral dust.  This is referred to as solar radiation management or SRM.  The idea is to dim sunlight, thereby slowing the rise of global temperatures by deflecting solar energy away from the Earth’s surface before it can be trapped as heat by greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.

The United Nations Environmental Program held workshops in May and September to address the issue of such strategies.  This official position of the UN is that strategies such as SRM are not a climate solution given that they do not actually address the underlying causes of climate change.  Recent research has shown that SRM efforts could potentially shift rainfall patterns, intensify heat waves or cold snaps, lead to overall drying, and have other unpredictable consequences.

Many participants expressed concern that the discussion focused too much on engineering aspects and not on the potential risks of such efforts.  The prevailing opinion among scientists is that SRM deployment is too dangerous and ungovernable and therefore should not be pursued.

Current geopolitical trends make the possibility of geoengineering efforts by authoritarian states disturbingly likely.  While there are international guidelines on geoengineering activities, the potential threat of unilateral efforts by rogue nations is growing.

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UN Sessions on Solar Geoengineering Trigger Unease

Photo, posted May 12, 2016, courtesy of Susanne Nilsson via Flickr.

Earth Wise is a production of WAMC Northeast Public Radio

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