Environmental impacts of personal protective clothing used to combat COVID-19
Environmental impacts of personal protective clothing used to combat COVID-19
Personal protective clothing is critical to shield users from highly infectious diseases including COVID-19. Such clothing is predominantly single-use, made of plastic-based synthetic fibres such as polypropylene and polyester, low cost and able to provide protection against pathogens. However, the environmental impacts of synthetic fibre-based clothing are significant and well-documented. Despite growing environmental concerns with single-use plastic-based protective clothing, the recent COVID-19 pandemic has seen a significant increase in their use, that could result in a further surge of oceanic plastic pollution, adding to mass of plastic waste that already threatens marine life. In this review, we briefly discuss the nature of the raw materials involved in the production of such clothing, as well as manufacturing techniques and the PPE supply chain. We identify the environmental impacts at critical points in the protective clothing value chain from production to consumption, focusing on water use, chemical pollution, CO2 emissions and waste. On the basis of these environmental impacts, we outline the need for fundamental changes in the business model, including increased usage of reusable protective clothing, addressing supply chain bottlenecks, establishing better waste management, and the use of sustainable materials and processes without associated environmental problems.
Physics - Medical Physics
Uddin, Mohammad Abbas
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Afroj, Shaila
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Hasan, Tahmid
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Carr, Chris
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Novoselov, Kostya S
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Karim, Nazmul
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13 October 2021
Uddin, Mohammad Abbas
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Afroj, Shaila
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Hasan, Tahmid
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Carr, Chris
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Novoselov, Kostya S
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Karim, Nazmul
31555bd6-2dc7-4359-b717-3b2fe223df36
Uddin, Mohammad Abbas, Afroj, Shaila, Hasan, Tahmid, Carr, Chris, Novoselov, Kostya S and Karim, Nazmul
(2021)
Environmental impacts of personal protective clothing used to combat COVID-19.
Advanced Sustainable Systems.
(doi:10.1002/adsu.202100176).
Abstract
Personal protective clothing is critical to shield users from highly infectious diseases including COVID-19. Such clothing is predominantly single-use, made of plastic-based synthetic fibres such as polypropylene and polyester, low cost and able to provide protection against pathogens. However, the environmental impacts of synthetic fibre-based clothing are significant and well-documented. Despite growing environmental concerns with single-use plastic-based protective clothing, the recent COVID-19 pandemic has seen a significant increase in their use, that could result in a further surge of oceanic plastic pollution, adding to mass of plastic waste that already threatens marine life. In this review, we briefly discuss the nature of the raw materials involved in the production of such clothing, as well as manufacturing techniques and the PPE supply chain. We identify the environmental impacts at critical points in the protective clothing value chain from production to consumption, focusing on water use, chemical pollution, CO2 emissions and waste. On the basis of these environmental impacts, we outline the need for fundamental changes in the business model, including increased usage of reusable protective clothing, addressing supply chain bottlenecks, establishing better waste management, and the use of sustainable materials and processes without associated environmental problems.
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Advanced Sustainable Systems - 2021 - Uddin - Environmental Impacts of Personal Protective Clothing Used to Combat COVID‐
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Published date: 13 October 2021
Keywords:
Physics - Medical Physics
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Local EPrints ID: 496015
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496015
PURE UUID: d9c5664d-b558-4145-8650-fd2dd7d2cb8b
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Date deposited: 29 Nov 2024 16:06
Last modified: 21 Aug 2025 02:52
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Author:
Mohammad Abbas Uddin
Author:
Shaila Afroj
Author:
Tahmid Hasan
Author:
Chris Carr
Author:
Kostya S Novoselov
Author:
Nazmul Karim
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