The end of humankind? It may be coming sooner than we think, thanks to hormone-disrupting chemicals that are decimating fertility at an alarming rate around the globe. A new book called Countdown, by Shanna Swan, an environmental and reproductive epidemiologist at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York, finds that sperm counts have dropped almost 60% since 1973. Following the trajectory we are on, Swanâs research suggests sperm counts could reach zero by 2045. Zero. Let that sink in. That would mean no babies. No reproduction. No more humans. Forgive me for asking: why isnât the UN calling an emergency meeting on this right now?
The chemicals to blame for this crisis are found in everything from plastic containers and food wrapping, to waterproof clothes and fragrances in cleaning products, to soaps and shampoos, to electronics and carpeting. Some of them, called PFAS, are known as âforever chemicalsâ, because they donât breakdown in the environment or the human body. They just accumulate and accumulate â doing more and more damage, minute by minute, hour by hour, day by day. Now, it seems, humanity is reaching a breaking point.
Swanâs book is staggering in its findings. âIn some parts of the world, the average twentysomething woman today is less fertile than her grandmother was at 35,â Swan writes. In addition to that, Swan finds that, on average, a man today will have half of the sperm his grandfather had. âThe current state of reproductive affairs canât continue much longer without threatening human survival,â writes Swan, adding: âItâs a global existential crisis.â Thatâs not hyperbole. Thatâs just science.
As if this wasnât terrifying enough, Swanâs research finds that these chemicals arenât just dramatically reducing semen quality, they are also . This is nothing short of a full-scale emergency for humanity.
Swanâs book echoes previous research, which has found that PFAS harms sperm production, disrupts the male hormone and is correlated to a âreduction of semen quality, testicular volume and penile lengthâ. These chemicals are literally confusing our bodies, making them send mix messages and go haywire.
Given everything we know about these chemicals, why isnât more being done? Right now, there is a paltry patchwork of inadequate legislation responding to this threat. Laws and regulations vary from country to country, region to region, and, in the United States, state to state. The European Union, for example, has restricted several phthalates in toys and sets limits on phthalates considered âreprotoxicâ â meaning they harm the human reproductive capacities â in food production.
In the United States, a scientific study found phthalate exposure âwidespreadâ in infants, and that the chemicals were found in the urine of babies who came into contact with baby shampoos, lotions and powders. Still, aggressive regulation is lacking, not least because of lobbying by chemical industry giants.
In the state of Washington, lawmakers managed to pass the Pollution Prevention for Our Future Act, which âdirects state agencies to address classes of chemicals and moves away from a chemical by chemical approach, which has historically resulted in companies switching to equally bad or worse substitutes. The first chemical classes to be addressed in products include phthalates, PFAS, PCBs, alkyphenol ethoxylate and bisphenol compounds, and organohalogen flame retardants.â The state has taken important steps to address the extent of chemical pollution, but by and large, the United States, like many other countries, is fighting a losing battle because of weak, inadequate legislation.
In the United States today, for example, you canât eat the deer meat caught in in Oscoda, Michigan, as the health department there issued a âdo not eatâ advisory for deer caught near the former air force base because of staggeringly high PFOS levels in the muscle of one deer.
And, just the other week, hundreds of residents who live near Luke air force base in Arizona were advised not to drink their water, when tests detected high levels of toxic chemicals. Scientists have found these substances in the blood of nearly all the people they tested in the US. No country or region on earth is untouched by PFAS contamination. It is a global problem. PFAS has been found in every corner of the globe. It is virtually present in the bodies of every human. Itâs found in fish deep in the sea, and birds flying high in the sky.
And itâs killing us, literally, by harming and attacking the very source of life: our reproductive capacities. The rapid death and decline of sperm must be addressed, and it must be addressed now. There simply is no time to lose.
- By Erin Brockovich, an environmental advocate and author of the new book, Supermanâs Not Coming: Our National Water Crisis and What We the People Can Do About It.
- Suzanne Boothby contributed research and reporting to this article