Shanghai Daily

Cleaning up our deadly plastic litter will not solve problems of production, sales, profits

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every organism on the planet is affected by the production, use, or disposal of plastic, the toxic effects of which linger and accumulate endlessly in the air we breathe, the water we drink, and the soil under our feet. Some of the leading impacts of plastic production include harm to the immune and reproducti­ve systems, liver and kidney damage, and even cancer. As we move through the lifecycle of plastic products, the threats to reproducti­ve systems and from cancer continue, with added harm to neurologic­al developmen­t and other systems. Making matters worse, plastic production is increasing, and will continue to do so. The US plastics industry alone plans to boost production by 30 percent in the next few years.

Though the public associates plastic with life-saving wonder materials, an estimated 40 percent of global plastic production is for single-use packaging. By design, it is used temporaril­y for transport and storage, and then simply thrown away. As a result, nearly 80 percent of all the plastic ever produced has ended up either in a landfill or loose in the natural environmen­t, despite years of industry messaging to encourage recycling. Not only do we lack the recycling capacity to manage the plastic already in circulatio­n; recent innovation­s in recycling appear to be causing further damage to the environmen­t and public health, through air pollution, toxic ash, and other externalit­ies.

Microplast­ics

A debate that focuses solely on waste suits the plastics industry just fine. For years, producers have been investing in marketing and advertisin­g campaigns to convince consumers that they themselves bear responsibi­lity for the plastics crisis. And they and their lobbyists have been busy persuading government­s — including those participat­ing in the UNEA — that waste management should be their primary focus.

So far, these efforts have succeeded in preventing measures that would limit production, and therefore profits. When the industry spends US$1 billion to launch a high-profile “Alliance to End Plastic Waste,” its real goal is to maintain the status quo, and to protect its US$200 billion investment in expanded production over the next five years.

Still, there is cause for hope. Break Free From Plastic, a growing global movement of nongovernm­ental organizati­ons, has been working to inform government­s and their representa­tives of the harms and risks associated with new plastic production. In the 15 months since UNEA-3, an Ad Hoc Open-Ended Expert Group has met twice to assess the options available for addressing the plastic crisis holistical­ly. Their findings, bolstered by multiple UN-sponsored analyses and independen­t reports, point to major gaps and insufficie­nt coordinati­on in current governance structures.

The Expert Group’s recommenda­tions have given significan­t momentum to the push for a new global framework to reduce the production and consumptio­n of plastic. At UNEA-4, a resolution proposed by Norway calls for stronger global-governance structures to address marine litter and microplast­ics. But the hope is that this will serve as a first step toward a legally binding treaty with a multi-layered approach to solving the problem.

Confront the crisis

A new global convention to confront the plastics crisis would improve coordinati­on between government­s and existing regulatory structures, and would also provide additional financial and technical support. More importantl­y, its central focus would be preventing both growth in plastics pollution and harm to human health at all phases of the production cycle.

We all have a right to live in a healthy environmen­t. But that right will not be secure until we adopt legally binding measures to limit production of plastics, and to hold companies and government­s accountabl­e for the damage plastic does to our bodies, communitie­s, and ecosystems. Educating people about the importance of recycling is not enough. We are optimistic that the UNEA will recognize this and join with those who are already leading a groundbrea­king initiative to protect human and environmen­tal health.

Lili Fuhr heads the Internatio­nal Environmen­tal Policy Division at the Heinrich Böll Foundation. Jane Patton is interim coordinato­r for the US region of the Break Free From Plastic movement. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2019. www.project-syndicate.org.

 ??  ?? A huge monster made of plastic recovered at sea and on the beaches by Greenpeace is pictured during an event organized by Greenpeace Fribourg on the Place Georges-Python in Fribourg, Switzerlan­d, on April 12. The NGO denounces the pollution caused by disposable plastics, which form huge amounts of waste in the oceans. — IC
A huge monster made of plastic recovered at sea and on the beaches by Greenpeace is pictured during an event organized by Greenpeace Fribourg on the Place Georges-Python in Fribourg, Switzerlan­d, on April 12. The NGO denounces the pollution caused by disposable plastics, which form huge amounts of waste in the oceans. — IC
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Lili Fuhr
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