In his latest address, Dr. Egon Cholakian returns to the urgent topic of micro- and nanoplastic, warning that the crisis is rapidly escalating. Emerging scientific data confirms that nanoplastic has become a real threat to human health, ecosystems, and the very future of civilization.
Dr. Cholakian shares urgent new findings and facts:
– Recent 2025 studies reveal a link between nanoplastic exposure and neurodegenerative diseases, including dementia, particularly among residents of coastal regions.
– Nanoplastic accelerates bacterial resistance to antibiotics, worsening the global crisis of untreatable infections.
– Its electrostatic charge is the key to its toxicity, making it especially dangerous for both human health and the entire biosphere.
– Missed opportunities, such as the atmospheric water generator (AWG) technology, have made the fight against the looming planetary crisis even more difficult.
Dr. Cholakian devotes special attention to the release of the scientific report “Nanoplastic in the Biosphere: From Molecular Impact to Planetary Crisis,” prepared by the ALLATRA scientific group and presented at the Vatican in 2025.
The report was produced in collaboration with two academic institutions—the Bolivian Catholic University and Juan Misael Saracho Autonomous University—which served as institutional peer-review partners. It was also developed in cooperation with a scientific contributor, the international project Creative Society.
This landmark document offers the first comprehensive analysis of:
– the pathways by which nanoplastic spreads through the biosphere,
– its infiltration of food chains,
– and its destructive impact on human health and ecosystems.
The core proposal of the ALLATRA scientific group is the development of technologies capable of neutralizing or blocking nanoplastic’s electrostatic charge, which is identified as the primary driver of its toxicity.
However, despite scientific breakthroughs and actionable solutions, Dr. Cholakian emphasizes that these are not enough. Political barriers, inadequate funding, and global inaction are turning an environmental crisis into an imminent catastrophe.
Dr. Cholakian calls for urgent action: only through global cooperation, robust support for science, and widespread public awareness can we halt the destruction of our health, our climate, and the very nature of what it means to be human.
Time is running out. But life is worth fighting for.