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The need for environmental regulation of tires: Challenges and recommendations.

Authors :
Trudsø, Louise Lynn
Nielsen, Maria Bille
Hansen, Steffen Foss
Syberg, Kristian
Kampmann, Kristoffer
Khan, Farhan R.
Palmqvist, Annemette
Source :
Environmental Pollution; Oct2022, Vol. 311, pN.PAG-N.PAG, 1p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The interest in tire wear particles (TWPs), generated from abrasion of tires, have gained traction over the past few years, both in regards to quantifying particulate emissions, leaching of different compounds, toxicity, and analytical methods. The life of a tire, from cradle to end-of-life, crosses over different scenarios during its lifetime and transcends environmental compartments and legislative areas, underlining the need for a collective approach. Sustainability for a tire encompasses the use of raw materials, recycling of raw materials, circular economy and material sourcing. The tire industry is currently making significant efforts towards a greener and more sustainable production considering reduction of CO 2 -emissions, recycling, material sources and implementing the use of biomass from plants rather than oil-derived alternatives. In this paper, we aim to analyze and discuss the need for environmental regulation of tires in order to provide a series of targeted recommendations for future legislation. Our study shows that the numerous regulations related to tires focus on chemicals, manufacturing, raw materials, use of tires on roads, waste handling, safety and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in different life cycle stages of a tire. However, none directly addresses the contribution of TWPs to the environment. Despite the overall good intentions of the existing regulations, there is a lack of focus on the compounds that partition from the tire and disperse in the environment, their mixture effects, and the transformative products from the parent compounds in the environment. Therefore, a renewed focus is needed on risk assessment of complex mixtures like TWPs. Thus, transparency in regard to use of chemicals in TWP, mixtures, minimization of emissions, and capture of particulate pollution should be a priority. [Display omitted] • The complexity of tire wear particles (TWPs) through their life cycle complicates risk assessment. • Abrasion of TWPs and leaching of their chemicals should warrant environmental regulation. • Read-across is not a sufficient tool for assessing the hazard potential of TWPs. • TWP sustainability needs to move focus from recycling and material sourcing to abrasion and chemical constituents. • TWP risk assessment needs to target abrasion of particles, chemical components, and mixture effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02697491
Volume :
311
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Environmental Pollution
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
159031004
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2022.119974