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1651. February 8, 2019 | The Guardian
UK worst offender in Europe for electronic waste exports - report
The UK is the worst offender in Europe for illegally exporting toxic electronic waste to developing countries, according to a two-year investigation that tracked shipments from 10 European countries.
1652. February 7, 2019 | The Conversation
Fossil fuels are bad for your health and harmful in many ways besides climate change
The coal, oil and natural gas industries are also connected with human rights violations, public health disasters and environmental devastation.
1653. February 7, 2019 | The Sydney Morning Herald
The Sydney suburbs at risk from worsening air quality
Hundreds of thousands of people have been exposed to potentially dangerous levels of air pollution, a study has found.
1654. February 7, 2019 | San Francisco Chronicle
Court gives Trump administration another chance to argue against pesticide ban
A federal appeals court will reconsider its ruling that ordered a ban on the widely used farm pesticide chlorpyrifos, a chemical linked to brain damage in children.
1655. February 6, 2019 | Reuters
Desperate Mongolians send children into countryside to escape choking winter smog
Mongolia has extended school winter holidays in the world's coldest capital and many families have sent children to live with relatives in the vast, windswept grasslands to escape choking smog and respiratory diseases such as pneumonia.
1656. February 5, 2019 | The Guardian
Europe's most deprived areas 'hit hardest by air pollution'
Exposure to particulate matter and ozone is highest in poor eastern European states, says study.
1657. February 5, 2019 | Environmental Health News
PFAS and phthalate chemical exposure early in life may hamper kids’ lungs
Study of more than 1,000 mothers and children in Europe links common chemicals to reduced lung function.
1658. February 4, 2019 | Daily Mail UK
Men who live on a main road are more likely to struggle to get an erection
Men who live on a main road are more likely to struggle to get an erection 'because the toxic fumes cut off their blood supply', a Chinese study on rats suggested
1659. February 4, 2019 | Chemistry and Engineering News
The pervasiveness of microplastics
Plastic particles are showing up in our food and in our bodies. Is that a problem?
1660. February 4, 2019 | CityLab
Pollution from traffic harms kids' academic performance
When students switch to schools downwind of major roads, their test scores fall and their absences increase, according to new research.
1661. January 31, 2019 | CNN
Toxic air forces Thai officials to close Bangkok schools for rest of week
Thailand's Ministry of Education has ordered all schools in Bangkok and some surrounding provinces to close for the remainder of the week amid concerns over dangerous levels of air pollution.
1662. January 31, 2019 | The Sun UK
Bangkok residents cough up blood and suffer massive nosebleeds as major pollution crisis hits Thai capital
Bangkok residents have been coughing up blood and suffering nosebleeds thanks to the city's pollution crisis.
1663. January 30, 2019 | Madison.com
Wisconsin case shows how sewage plants spread unregulated toxics across landscape
Hazardous, indestructible PFAS compounds pass through sewage treatment plants and end up in public waters and farm fields.
1664. January 30, 2019 | Consumer Reports
Arsenic and lead are in your fruit juice: What you need to know
Consumer Reports' testing has discovered concerning amounts of toxic heavy metals including arsenic and lead in fruit juice, and many of those juices marketed to children.
1665. January 30, 2019 | The Guardian
EU proposes ban on 90% of microplastic pollutants
A wide-ranging ban on microplastics covering about 90% of pollutants has been proposed by the EU in an attempt to cut 400,000 tonnes of plastic pollution in 20 years.
1666. January 29, 2019 | Reuters
US judge to allow controversial evidence in Roundup cancer trials
A federal judge overseeing lawsuits alleging Bayer AG's glyphosate-based Roundup weed killer causes cancer on Monday tentatively allowed evidence that the company had hoped to exclude from upcoming trials.
1667. January 28, 2019 | Environmental Health News
How diapers and menstrual pads are exposing babies and women to hormone-disrupting, toxic chemicals
Health advocates say the report is the latest example of products falling through regulatory cracks and an inadequate societal focus on women's reproductive health.
1668. January 28, 2019 | The Times
China under fire as South Korea chokes on ‘fine dust’ pollution
It arrives from across the sea to the west, most often in the winter and spring, a choking yellow cloud that descends across the peninsula.
1669. January 25, 2019 | Chemical Watch
Canada considers restricting flame retardants in tents, toys
Health Canada is considering restricting or banning flame retardants in tents and some children's toys as part of its proposed updates to the country's Tent Regulations.
1670. January 25, 2019 | DW.com
Nitrogen oxide: Is it really that dangerous, lung doctors ask?
Several German pulmonary physicians question the current nitrogen oxide and particulate matter limits. These are inadequate and mainly based on questionable epidemiological studies, they say.
1671. January 25, 2019 | Science magazine
As legal pot farms expand, so do air pollution worries
Researchers have long known that VOCs emitted by plants can contribute to smog. VOCs can mix with nitrogen oxides - produced by cars and industrial sources - in sunlight-driven reactions that produce ground-level ozone, a pollutant.
1672. January 24, 2019 | Earth.com
Why do some tuna contain toxic mercury levels, while others don’t?
A new study may help to explain why toxic methylmercury concentrations in tuna fish vary across different geographic regions.
1673. January 24, 2019 | Mother Jones
Lead exposure creates mean(er) mockingbirds
Lead is bad for human infants, and apparently it's bad for mockingbirds as well. In both cases, the problem is lead in soil.
1674. January 21, 2019 | Mirror UK
New exhaust fume link to breast cancer
There is a one-in-10,000 chance that six women who worked in an area of high pollution and got breast cancers within three years of each other was a coincidence. In other words, pollution plays a part in developing the disease.
1675. January 18, 2019 | Telegraph UK
Asthma attacks three times more common than thought, amid warnings over air pollution
Asthma attacks are three times as common as previously thought, according to new figures which have sparked warnings about the impact of air pollution.