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Inhalable Microplastics and Urban Air Pollution

Why is this in News?

  • November–December 2025:
    • first-of-its-kind Indian study, published in Environment International, has flagged inhalable microplastics as a serious and overlooked air pollutant.
    • Conducted across Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, and Chennai by IISER Kolkata.
  • Context:
    • Severe winter smog episodes in NCR.
    • Public protests demanding the right to clean air.
  • Key finding:
    • City residents inhale ~132 micrograms of microplastics daily, with Delhi and Kolkata worst affected.

Relevance

GS III – Environment & Public Health

  • Emerging environmental contaminants.
  • Limitations of AQI and existing pollution frameworks.
  • Urban air pollution and health externalities.
  • Plastic waste management failures.

What are Microplastics?

  • Microplastics:
    • Plastic particles <5 mm in size.
  • Inhalable microplastics:
    • Particles <10 micrometres (µm).
    • Small enough to:
      • Bypass nasal filtration.
      • Penetrate deep lung tissue.
  • Source:
    • Primary: Microbeads, synthetic fibres.
    • Secondary: Breakdown of larger plastic waste.

Traditional Air Pollution Framework

  • Focus on criteria pollutants:
    • PM2.5, PM10.
    • SO₂, NOx, CO, ozone, lead.
  • AQI:
    • Does not explicitly account for microplastics.
  • Gap:
    • Emerging contaminants like microplastics remain outside regulatory radar.

Key Findings of the Study

Concentration Levels

  • Average inhalable microplastics (4 cities):
    • 8.8 µg/m³.
  • Daily exposure:
    • ~132 µg per person per day.
  • City-wise exposure:
    • Delhi: 14.18 µg/m³
    • Kolkata: 14.23 µg/m³
    • Mumbai: 2.65 µg/m³
    • Chennai: 4 µg/m³

Seasonal Variation

  • Winter evenings:
    • 32.7 particles/m³
  • Non-winter evenings:
    • 18.8 particles/m³
  • 74% increase during winter due to:
    • Temperature inversion.
    • Low wind speed.
    • Poor dispersion.

“Trojan Horse” Effect

  • Microplastics act as carriers for:
    • Heavy metals:
      • Lead (highest in Kolkata).
      • Cadmium.
    • Endocrine-disrupting chemicals:
      • Diethyl phthalates.
    • Microbes:
      • Fungi like Aspergillus fumigatus.
      • Antibiotic-resistance genes.
  • Net impact:
    • Amplifies toxicity beyond physical particles.

Health Implications

  • Deep lung penetration → chronic exposure.
  • Linked risks:
    • Respiratory diseases.
    • Hormone-related disorders.
    • Cancer.
    • Breast and reproductive health issues.
  • High-risk groups:
    • Traffic police.
    • Construction workers.
    • Urban informal labour.
  • Tyre-wear microplastics:
    • Identified as particularly carcinogenic.

Sources of Inhalable Microplastics

  • Urban origins:
    • Tyre wear.
    • Synthetic textiles.
    • Packaging materials.
    • Cosmetics.
    • Construction activities.
    • Household waste.
  • Waste management failures:
    • Open dumping.
    • Burning of plastics.
    • Poor segregation.

Why Delhi and Kolkata are Worse Affected

  • High population density.
  • Severe waste mismanagement.
  • Landlocked geography.
  • Adverse winter meteorology.
  • Contrast:
    • Mumbai and Chennai benefit from:
      • Coastal winds.
      • Better atmospheric dispersion.

Governance and Policy Gaps

  • AQI framework:
    • Not designed to capture microplastics.
  • Plastic regulation:
    • Weak enforcement of single-use plastic bans.
  • Occupational safety:
    • No specific standards for microplastic exposure.
  • Waste management:
    • Persistent urban governance failures.

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