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Five Things To Know About Plastic Pollution And How To Stop It

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9월 6, 2021
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Written by Econintersect Guest

— the post authored by Tara Lohan, The Revelator

Our plastic pollution problem has reached new heights and new depths. Researchers continue to find new information about how widespread plastic pollution has become, but also how we can help stem the tide.

plastic.beach.singapore.caption


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Scientists have found bits of plastic on the seafloor, thousands of feet below the ocean’s surface. Plastic debris has also washed ashore on remote islands; traveled to the top of pristine mountains; and been found inside the bodies of whales, turtles, seabirds and people, too.

Tiny plastic particles are now ubiquitous and insidious. And the mounting pollution that swirls in ocean gyres and washes ashore on beaches poses a big threat to wildlife and ecosystems. So too, does the production of that plastic.

A number of recent studies – not to mention articles and essays published here in The Revelator – have helped pinpoint just how bad things have gotten and also what we can do about the problem. Here’s what you should know about plastic:

1. There’s a lot of it.

In a September study published in Science about the growth of plastic waste, an international team of researchers estimated that 19 to 23 million metric tons – or 11% of plastic waste generated – ended up in aquatic ecosystems in 2016. And even with countries pledging to help cut waste or better manage it, the amount of plastic pollution is likely to double in the next 10 years.

A study about solutions to plastic waste, published in the same issue, attributed the plastic pollution epidemic to a rise in single-use plastic and “an expanding ‘throw-away’ culture.” The researchers also found that waste-management systems simply can’t deal with the onslaught of plastic, which is why so much of it ends up in the environment. We now know that only 9% of the plastic products we use actually get recycled.

2. The United States is a big culprit.

Plastic pollution is a global problem, but the United States plays an outsized role. In 2016 the United States was responsible for more plastic waste than any other country, a new study in Science Advances found. Some of that waste was dumped illegally within the country and some was shipped to other countries that lacked the necessary infrastructure to handle it. The researchers concluded:

“The amount of plastic waste generated in the United States estimated to enter the coastal environment in 2016 was up to five times larger than that estimated for 2010, rendering the United States’ contribution among the highest in the world.”

Part of that is because the United States ranks second in exporting plastic scrap.

3. It threatens wildlife and ecosystems.

Out of sight (for Americans) is not out of mind – and definitely not out of our waterways. An estimated 700 marine species and 50 freshwater species have either ingested plastic or been entangled in it.

otter with plastic bottle

A giant otter plays with a plastic bottle. (Photo by Paul Williams, CC BY-NC 2.0)

George Leonard, the Ocean Conservancy’s chief scientist and coauthor of the September Science study about plastic waste’s increase, told National Geographic:

“If we don’t get the plastic pollution problem in the ocean under control, we threaten contaminating the entire marine food web, from phytoplankton to whales. And by the time the science catches up to this, perhaps definitively concluding that this is problematic, it will be too late. We will not be able to go back. That massive amount of plastic will be embedded in the ocean’s wildlife essentially forever.”

Microplastics have also been found in terrestrial animals, soil, drinking water and, not surprisingly, in our own bodies, although it’s not clear yet just how dangerous that is for people.

4. The fracking boom is producing a plastic boom.

Despite the known risks of plastic pollution and concern over its mounting presence in the environment, plastic production – driven by fossil fuels like fracked gas and its component chemicals – is on pace to increase by 40% in the next 10 years.

The American Chemistry Council boasted that shale gas drilling is driving a surge in plastic production, including the investment of more than $200 billion to fund new and expanded operations at 343 production plants in the United States.

On the ground this means more harmful pollution along the Gulf Coast’s “Cancer Alley,” where petrochemicals have been manufactured for decades in low-wealth communities of color. And it means the build-out of new facilities in Rust Belt states such as Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia.

Fracking also causes harmful greenhouse gas emissions, like methane, to be released into the atmosphere – amplifying the climate crisis. The refining process and the incineration of plastic waste also further drives greenhouse emissions and hazardous pollution.

skyline of pollution from plant

A petrochemical plant in Houston’s ship channel. Photo: Louis Vest, (CC BY-NC 2.0).

Fracking also causes harmful greenhouse gas emissions, like methane, to be released into the atmosphere – amplifying the climate crisis. The refining process and the incineration of plastic waste also further drives greenhouse emissions and hazardous pollution.

5. Solutions are multifaceted.

Beach cleanups tend to make headlines, but it’s a losing battle as long as petrochemical companies keep producing so much plastic and we keep using plastic for products we’re meant to toss after a single use.

The September study in Science on plastic solutions found that it’s possible to cut plastic pollution – perhaps as much as 80% by 2040 – but it will take systemic change both in reducing the amount of plastic produced and in better managing the waste stream.

Regulatory efforts can help this process, including by regulating plastic as a pollution source under the Clean Water Act.

Efforts to ban single-use plastics, as the European Union aims to do by 2021, are another positive step. So too are “circular economy laws,” which have been introduced, but not yet passed, in the United States.

These laws would halt the production of new petrochemical facilities and encourage businesses to take responsibility for the full lifecycle of the products they produce by requiring them to be reused, adequately recycled or composted.

Getting circular economy laws enacted, though, will mean enough public and political will to counter the petrochemical, fossil fuel and plastic industries.

At The Revelator, we’ll keep covering the push for solutions to the plastic problem and new science to better understand the threats. And if you want to know more about how wildlife has already been affected, what laws could help, whether industry will be held accountable and more, check out these stories from our archives:


Laws and Regulations

Why Plastic Pollution Is a Producer Responsibility

Plastic Pollution: Could We Have Solved the Problem Nearly 50 Years Ago?

How an Old Law Is Helping Fight New Plastic Problems

New California Bill Could Revolutionize How the U.S. Tackles Plastic Pollution

What Laws Work Best to Cut Plastic Pollution?

Can Plastic Ever Be Made Illegal?

Impacts

New Research Shows Just How Many Fish Are Eating Plastic

Something Fishy: Toxic Plastic Pollution Is Traveling Up the Food Chain

Plastic Pollution: From Ship to Shore

Plans to Turn America’s Rust Belt Into a New Plastics Belt Are Bad News for the Climate

Trash in the Galflpagos Reveals the Dark Side of Ecotourism

Elephant Seals: Diving Through Garbage

Taking Action

The Story of Plastic: New Film Exposes the Source of Our Plastic Crisis

How to Win the Fight Against Plastic

Can Cities Go Zero-waste? One Japanese Town Tried

The Secret Value of Trash

Junk Raft: A Journey Through a Polluted Ocean

Are Bioplastics a Better Environmental Choice?

Plastic Pollution Is a Problem – These Kids Are Working for a Solution

Thai Activists Fight Trash Taboo


This article appeared on The Revalator 17 March 2021 and is reproduced here under a Creative Commons 3.0 license. Creative Commons

About the Author

Tara Lohan is deputy editor of The Revelator and has worked for more than a decade as a digital editor and environmental journalist focused on the intersections of energy, water and climate. Her work has been published by The Nation, American Prospect, High Country News, Grist, Pacific Standard and others. She is the editor of two books on the global water crisis. @TaraLohan


Caption image clipped from Plastic pollution lines a Singapore beach. Photo: Vaidehi Shah, (CC BY 2.0). Full photo below. Click on picture for larger image, use return arrow to come back to this page.

plastic.beach.singapore.cc_by_2.0

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