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Study Claims Pollutants and Climate Change Fuel a Global Fertility Crisis

Researchers say 140,000 synthetic chemicals and rising temperatures are disrupting reproduction across species, with only 1% of chemicals fully studied for safety.

  • A new review published in NPJ Emerging Contaminants indicates that synthetic chemicals and rising temperatures are severely disrupting reproductive processes in both humans and wildlife.
  • While 140,000 synthetic chemicals currently exist, only 1,000 are known to affect the endocrine system, which produces hormones essential for successful reproduction.
  • Studies show microplastic exposure correlates with falling sperm counts, though researchers call current safety data a "gross underestimate" given that only 1% of chemicals have undergone sufficient evaluation.
  • Ecotoxicologist Susanne Brander from the University of Oregon notes that warming temperatures and chemical exposures interact to exacerbate reproductive stress across species.
  • Negotiations for a Global Plastics Treaty reflect growing recognition that plastic pollution represents an urgent planetary health emergency, as scientists warn of a 'silent' fertility crisis.
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Scientists warn that pesticides, plastics, chemicals like PFAS, and climate change are quietly destroying the reproductive capacity of humans and animals. Wildlife populations are rapidly declining and infertility in humans is increasing.

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  • 57% of the sources are Center
57% Center

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Fortune broke the news in New York, United States on Monday, April 27, 2026.
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