Rare Earth and Platinum Group Elements In Sub-Saharan Africa and Global Health: The Dark Side of the Burgeoning of Technology.

IF 2.3 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Environmental Health Insights Pub Date : 2024-09-12 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1177/11786302241271553
Chiara Frazzoli, Beatrice Bocca, Beatrice Battistini, Flavia Ruggieri, Joaquim Rovira, Cecilia Nwadiuto Amadi, Samuel James Offor, Orish E Orisakwe
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Abstract

Despite steady progress in the development and promotion of the circular economy as a model, an overwhelming proportion of technological devices discarded by the Global North still finds its way to the Global South, where technology-related environmental health problems start from the predation of resources and continue all the way to recycling and disposal. We reviewed literature on TCEs in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), focussing on: the sources and levels of environmental pollution; the extent of human exposure to these substances; their role in the aetiology of human diseases; their effects on the environment. Our review shows that even minor and often neglected technology-critical elements (TCEs), like rare earth elements (REEs) and platinum group elements (PGEs), reveal the environmental damage and detrimental health effects caused by the massive mining of raw materials, exacerbated by improper disposal of e-waste (from dumping to improper recycling and open burning). We draw attention of local research on knowledge gaps such as workable safer methods for TCE recovery from end-of-life products, secondary materials and e-waste, environmental bioremediation and human detoxification. The technical and political shortcomings in the management of TCEs in SSA is all the more alarming against the background of unfavourable determinants of health and a resulting higher susceptibility to diseases, especially among children who work in mines and e-waste recycling sites or who reside in dumping sites.This paper demonstrates, for the first time, that the role of unjust North-South dynamics is evident even in the environmental levels of minor trace elements and that the premise underlying attempts to solve the problem of e-waste dumped in Africa through recycling and disposal technology is in fact misleading. The influx of foreign electrical and electronic equipments should be controlled and limited by clearly defining what is a 'useful' second-hand device and what is e-waste; risks arising from device components or processing by-products should be managed differently, and scientific uncertainty and One Health thinking should be incorporated in risk assessment.

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撒哈拉以南非洲的稀土和铂族元素与全球健康:技术突飞猛进的阴暗面》。
尽管在发展和推广循环经济模式方面取得了稳步进展,但全球北方国家丢弃的绝大部分技术设备仍然流向了全球南方国家,在那里,与技术相关的环境健康问题从掠夺资源开始,一直延续到回收和处置。我们回顾了撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA)有关三氯乙烷的文献,重点关注:环境污染的来源和程度;人类接触这些物质的程度;它们在人类疾病病因学中的作用;它们对环境的影响。我们的研究表明,即使是稀土元素(REE)和铂族元素(PGE)等经常被忽视的次要关键技术元素(TCE),也揭示了原材料的大量开采对环境造成的破坏和对健康的不利影响,而电子废物的不当处置(从倾倒到不当回收和露天焚烧)又加剧了这种破坏和影响。我们提请当地研究人员注意知识差距,例如从报废产品、二次材料和电子废物中回收三氯乙烷的更安全可行的方法、环境生物修复和人体解毒。在不利的健康决定因素背景下,撒哈拉以南非洲国家在管理三氯乙酸方面存在的技术和政治缺陷更加令人担忧,因为这些因素导致人们更容易患病,尤其是在矿山和电子废物回收站工作或居住在垃圾倾倒场的儿童。本文首次证明,即使在微量元素的环境水平方面,不公正的南北动态的作用也是显而易见的,而且试图通过回收和处理技术来解决倾倒在非洲的电子废物问题的前提实际上是误导性的。应通过明确界定什么是 "有用的 "二手设备和什么是电子废物来控制和限制外国电气和电子设备的流入;应对设备部件或加工副产品产生的风险进行不同的管理,并在风险评估中纳入科学不确定性和 "一个健康 "思维。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Environmental Health Insights
Environmental Health Insights PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
22.20%
发文量
97
审稿时长
8 weeks
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