TY - JOUR
T1 - Priorities to inform research on tire particles and their chemical leachates
T2 - A collective perspective
AU - Obanya, Henry E.
AU - Khan, Farhan R.
AU - Carrasco-Navarro, Victor
AU - Rødland, Elisabeth Støhle
AU - Walker-Franklin, Imari
AU - Thomas, Jomin
AU - Cooper, Adam
AU - Molden, Nick
AU - Amaeze, Nnamdi H.
AU - Patil, Renuka S.
AU - Kukkola, Anna
AU - Michie, Laura
AU - Green-Ojo, Bidemi
AU - Rauert, Cassandra
AU - Couceiro, Fay
AU - Hutchison, Gary R.
AU - Tang, Jinglong
AU - Ugor, Joshua
AU - Lee, Seokhwan
AU - Hofmann, Thilo
AU - Ford, Alex T.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024
PY - 2024/12/15
Y1 - 2024/12/15
N2 - Concerns over the ecological impacts of urban road runoff have increased, partly due to recent research into the harmful impacts of tire particles and their chemical leachates. This study aimed to help the community of researchers, regulators and policy advisers in scoping out the priority areas for further study. To improve our understanding of these issues an interdisciplinary, international network consisting of experts (United Kingdom, Norway, United States, Australia, South Korea, Finland, Austria, China and Canada) was formed. We synthesised the current state of the knowledge and highlighted priority research areas for tire particles (in their different forms) and their leachates. Ten priority research questions with high importance were identified under four themes (environmental presence and detection; chemicals of concern; biotic impacts; mitigation and regulation). The priority research questions include the importance of increasing the understanding of the fate and transport of these contaminants; better alignment of toxicity studies; obtaining the holistic understanding of the impacts; and risks they pose across different ecosystem services. These issues have to be addressed globally for a sustainable solution. We highlight how the establishment of the intergovernmental science-policy panel on chemicals, waste, and pollution prevention could further address these issues on a global level through coordinated knowledge transfer of car tire research and regulation. We hope that the outputs from this research paper will reduce scientific uncertainty in assessing and managing environmental risks from TP and their leachates and aid any potential future policy and regulatory development.
AB - Concerns over the ecological impacts of urban road runoff have increased, partly due to recent research into the harmful impacts of tire particles and their chemical leachates. This study aimed to help the community of researchers, regulators and policy advisers in scoping out the priority areas for further study. To improve our understanding of these issues an interdisciplinary, international network consisting of experts (United Kingdom, Norway, United States, Australia, South Korea, Finland, Austria, China and Canada) was formed. We synthesised the current state of the knowledge and highlighted priority research areas for tire particles (in their different forms) and their leachates. Ten priority research questions with high importance were identified under four themes (environmental presence and detection; chemicals of concern; biotic impacts; mitigation and regulation). The priority research questions include the importance of increasing the understanding of the fate and transport of these contaminants; better alignment of toxicity studies; obtaining the holistic understanding of the impacts; and risks they pose across different ecosystem services. These issues have to be addressed globally for a sustainable solution. We highlight how the establishment of the intergovernmental science-policy panel on chemicals, waste, and pollution prevention could further address these issues on a global level through coordinated knowledge transfer of car tire research and regulation. We hope that the outputs from this research paper will reduce scientific uncertainty in assessing and managing environmental risks from TP and their leachates and aid any potential future policy and regulatory development.
KW - Microplastics
KW - Risk analysis
KW - Road run-offs
KW - Tire particles
KW - Tire rubber additives
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85208201923&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.envres.2024.120222
DO - 10.1016/j.envres.2024.120222
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85208201923
SN - 0013-9351
VL - 263
JO - Environmental Research
JF - Environmental Research
M1 - 120222
ER -