Shanghai Daily

UN report says world choking on plastic trash

- (AFP)

UP to 5 trillion grocery bags are used each year and like most plastic garbage barely any of them is recycled, the United Nations said yesterday as it warned the world was choking on trash.

In a report on Internatio­nal Environmen­t Day, the UN warned that at current levels the earth could be awash with 12 billion tons of plastic trash by the middle of the century.

“Our oceans have been used as a dumping ground, choking marine life and transformi­ng some marine areas into a plastic soup,” Erik Solheim, head of UN Environmen­t, said in the report released in New Delhi. “In cities around the world, plastic waste clogs drains, causing foods and breeding disease. Consumed by livestock, it also finds its way into the food chain.”

Most of this plastic garbage clogging waterways and landfill is single-use items like straws, bags and cutlery.

The report said the 5 trillion plastic bags consumed each year equaled nearly 10 million plastic bags per minute.

“If tied together, all these plastic bags could be wrapped around the world seven times every hour.”

Some 79 percent of the plastic ever made has ended up dumped, with hardly any reused or destroyed despite recycling and other initiative­s to curb use, the report said.

Just 9 percent of the 9 billion tons of plastic the world has ever produced has been recycled. Only a little more — 12 percent — has been incinerate­d.

This leaves only landfill, oceans and waterways as the resting place for the world’s plastic trash, where it takes thousands of years to decompose.

Plastic clogging sewers — a major problem in Delhi and slums across the developing world — can spread disease or wind up in the stomachs of animals, the UN said.

In India, plastic has been found inside dead cows while a whale in Thailand died after consuming waste bags.

Garbage floating at sea costs fishing, shipping and tourism industries in Asia-Pacific US$1.3 billion a year, the report said.

The UN said more than 60 countries had introduced bans and levies on single-use plastic items like bags.

But better waste management, financial incentives to change consumers’ buying habits and research into alternativ­e materials were needed to make any real change, it added. “To meet the rising tide of plastics, we urgently need strong government leadership and interventi­on,” the report said.

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