R.A.R.E - Rare Animals Really Endangered

R.A.R.E - Rare Animals Really Endangered Spreading awareness and love of the planet through art education, science and exhibitions

By providing artistic interpretations of facts and action ideas, R.A.R.E. teaches the necessity of caring for our planet to children and young adults.

At Badou Primary School/八斗國小; celebrating the school anniversary through song, dance and art. It was wonderful to be a p...
26/04/2026

At Badou Primary School/八斗國小; celebrating the school anniversary through song, dance and art. It was wonderful to be a part of this school year with our environmental art education program.

Happy Earth Day! We will be celebrating this weekend at Ba Dou Primary School Anniversary/八斗國小. Our third and final art ...
24/04/2026

Happy Earth Day! We will be celebrating this weekend at Ba Dou Primary School Anniversary/八斗國小. Our third and final art residency “sculpture” from ocean trash is complete. This year’s theme is on the tide pool environment. Thank you 感謝大家/to Vice Principle Che and Badou staff, Clemence, Kayla and Andy for making it possible.

The final phase of our Artist in residence sculpture project at Ba Dou Primary School; in preparation for the school ann...
15/04/2026

The final phase of our Artist in residence sculpture project at Ba Dou Primary School; in preparation for the school anniversary. Thank you to our volunteer Kayla. You will be missed!

Working from home over the Chinese New Year break. And a trip to Badou Primary school with mom to work with the plastic ...
12/03/2026

Working from home over the Chinese New Year break. And a trip to Badou Primary school with mom to work with the plastic trash collected along the NE Coast. Had to visit the school resident “Chocolate” to properly bring in the horse year!

Beautiful day to clean up trash (NE Coast) as we prepare for our third and final “Sculpture” for Badou Primary School. T...
05/02/2026

Beautiful day to clean up trash (NE Coast) as we prepare for our third and final “Sculpture” for Badou Primary School. Thank you to all the extra hands and shout out to TIKI Republik and Blue Dot Treat for making the day extra special. Happy Birthday Owen!!

29/01/2026

A study published Tuesday in the Lancet Planetary Health highlights how humanity's continued reliance on plastics—which are primarily derived from planet-heating fossil fuels—is expected to harm global health over the next couple of decades.

" Plastics life cycles emit a range of gases and pollutants that contribute to the global burden of disease, including greenhouse gases that drive climate change, air pollutants linked to respiratory illnesses, and hazardous chemicals associated with cancers and other noncommunicable diseases," the study explains.

"These emissions occur across all stages of the plastics value chain: from oil and gas extraction, which provides the feedstocks for more than 90% of global plastics; to polymer production and product manufacturing, global transportation, recycling, and formal or informal waste management and mismanagement; to the gradual degradation of plastics in the environment," the publication continues.

Researchers from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) and University of Exeter in the United Kingdom, as well as France's University of Toulouse, modeled various scenarios of plastics production, consumption, and disposal from 2016-40.

"The study is the first of its kind to assess the number of healthy years of life lost ('disability-adjusted life years' or 'DALYS'—a measure of harm) due to greenhouse gases, air pollutants, and toxic chemicals emitted across the life cycle of plastics at a global scale," according to LSHTM.

The team estimated that without any changes in global plastics policies and practices, annual health impacts would soar from 2.1 million DALYs in 2016 to 4.5 million DALYs by 2040—with a total of 83 million healthy years of life lost over the full study period. Under a business-as-usual scenario, 40% of the health harms would be tied to rising temperatures, nearly a third to air pollution, and over a quarter to toxic chemicals.

Because of limited data—particularly on the use stage of plastics and the chemicals they contain—lead author Megan Deeney of LSHTM told Agence France-Presse that “this is undoubtedly a vast underestimate of the total human health impacts.”

Still, the researchers were able to offer some insight into the adverse health impacts—thanks to their repurposing of modeling methods typically used to evaluate the environmental footprint of individual products and technologies.

These methods "are an increasingly important tool to tackle sustainability questions at a much larger scale," study co-author and Exeter professor Xiaoyu Yan said in a statement. "Our study shows that this approach can help uncover the massive impacts of plastics on human health throughout the life cycle. We now need urgent action to reduce the impacts of plastics on the environment and ultimately human health."

Deeney stressed that such action can't be restricted to consumers. As she put it, "Our research shows that the adverse health impacts of plastics stretch far beyond the point at which we buy a plastic product or put plastic items in a recycling bin."

In the US alone, government data suggests that just 5% of plastic waste is recycled annually, according to a Greenpeace report published last month. The advocacy group also noted that only a fifth of the 8.8 million tons of the most commonly produced types of plastics are even recyclable.

"Often the blame is put on us as individual consumers of plastics to solve the problem, but while we all have an important role to play in reducing the use of plastics, our analysis shows systemic change is needed 'from the cradle to the grave' of plastic production, use, and disposal," Deeney said Tuesday. "Much more ambitious action from governments and industry transparency is needed to curb this growing global plastics public health crisis."

The lead author said that the most effective measure is slashing the production of "unnecessary" plastic. She also pointed out that lack of data doesn't just impact studies like this one: "Industry nondisclosure and inconsistent reporting of plastics' chemical composition is severely limiting the ability of life cycle assessments (LCAs) to inform effective policy to protect humans, ecosystems, and the environment."

The study comes after the latest round of global plastics treaty negotiations stalled in August—which environmentalists called an "abject failure" that should be blamed on the Trump administration, Saudi Arabia, and other major governments opposed to curbing production.

"The inability to reach an agreement in Geneva must be a wake-up call for the world: Ending plastic pollution means confronting fossil fuel interests head-on," Greenpeace USA's Graham Forbes said at the time. "The vast majority of governments want a strong agreement, yet a handful of bad actors were allowed to use process to drive such ambition into the ground."

--

Jessica Corbett is a senior editor and staff writer for Common Dreams.

Our work is licensed under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0). Feel free to republish and share widely.

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The magic we rarely stop to see…under our feet and above;)
27/01/2026

The magic we rarely stop to see…under our feet and above;)

Back at Badou Primary School; planning our end of year exhibition and preparing our last “sculpture” piece for the schoo...
22/01/2026

Back at Badou Primary School; planning our end of year exhibition and preparing our last “sculpture” piece for the school anniversary in the spring! I can’t get enough of the children’s work. Check out the crab and her sexy lashes;p

This week’s 4/5th grade artists learning about the nearby tidal environment and creatures.
30/12/2025

This week’s 4/5th grade artists learning about the nearby tidal environment and creatures.

Thank you Kayla our volunteer from Australia for your extra hands. Full week at Badou Prinary School…From beach cleanups...
24/12/2025

Thank you Kayla our volunteer from Australia for your extra hands. Full week at Badou Prinary School…From beach cleanups to learning about tidal habitat and making beautiful art;) Happy Holidays everyone!

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