National Post

Time to End Single-use Plastics for a Brighter Ocean and Climate Future

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Humans have tipped the planet’s balance, and everyone is paying for it. We take too much, we make too much, and we waste too much, thanks to our linear systemof consumptio­n. This linear system and our throwaway culture aren’t, and never were, serving us or our planet. There isno “away” for our waste to go. Our natural systems have reached their limits.

We’re in a climate crisis. The state of our oceans is dire. Rapid and widespread biodiversi­ty loss across ecosystems is weighing heavily on wildlife and nature lovers worldwide. Th emerging and amplificat­ion of global environmen­tal crises isn’t a coincidenc­e. The interconne­ctedness of our blue planet’ s natural systems is both a strength and a weakness in the survival of life on Earth.

Plastic has emerged as an unfortunat­e player in our planet’s multi- system breakdown. Our reliance on plastic, mainly in single- use formats, contribute­s to the climate, oceans, and biodiversi­ty crises and has created its own — the plastic waste and pollution crisis.

Almost all plastic is made from fossil fuels. From extraction to disposal, plastic creates harmful emissions. Recent studies also found that plastic emits even when it’s in the form of pollution. Without a halt in plastic production, greenhouse gas emissions related to plastic will continue to rise, which in turn puts more pressure on the oceans, which are already feeling the effects of a changing climate. Changing ocean conditions make it harder for species to be resilient against threats like plastic pollution, and marine biodiversi­ty gets it at all angles.

Weneed a new system that’s truly circular instead of linear— one that rethinks, reduces, and reuses, instead of one that takes, makes, and wastes.

With so many massive problems to tackle, where’ s a person supposed to start? While single- use plastic certainly isn’t the soled river of the climate and oceans breakdowns, in our everyday lives it’s representa­tive of a wasteful and careless culture we need to leave behind. By rejecting single-use plastic where possible, encouragin­g businesses to do the same, and joining a global movement of people calling for aban on non-essential plastics, we can help curb our collective plastic and carbon footprint. More sustainabl­e ways of receiving goods and services are all around us— we just need to embrace them and use our collective power to demand greener and healthier solutions.

 ??  ?? Sarah King Head of Oceans & Plastics, Greenpeace Canada
Sarah King Head of Oceans & Plastics, Greenpeace Canada

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