Cape Times

Right of reply: Taking the Greenwash route to solve plastic crisis

- Niven Reddy

THIS ARTICLE is in response to the article titled “Are plastic alternativ­es a blessing or a curse?” by Anton Hanekom, the executive director of Plastics SA.

The issue with plastic is evident for everyone to see: it fills our streets and waterways, and now we know that plastic particles have entered our food systems too. So how do we address this issue? How can we prevent our families from ingesting toxic plastic during every meal?

Certainly not through the continued production of plastic.

Hanekom makes a compelling argument that in South Africa recycling has saved tons of CO2 emissions and landfill space, but what he does not mention is that we are only recycling roughly 9 percent of the plastic that we are producing.

It is pretty much an industry tactic to lead us to believe that despite the ever-increasing amount of plastic entering our ecosystem, recycling is the answer. This provides a convenient excuse for the industry to continue to churn out massive amounts of plastic packaging. We need to shift from believing that recycling alone is the solution to this problem.

The idea that people are to blame for plastic pollution was intentiona­lly planted by the fast-moving consumer goods industry to protect their business model. While people do need to act responsibl­y and know how to manage their waste, companies producing this waste need to step up and take some accountabi­lity.

Phasing out single-use plastic such as sachets, straws and cutlery, while implementi­ng a separation at source programme, would be the ideal start we need.

We have to start taking a zero waste approach to waste management in our country. Packaging that cannot be reduced, reused or recycled should not be produced.

Furthermor­e, we cannot change from plastic to another form of packaging and continue to “over package”, for this will result in a future crisis. Who has not been frustrated by the very many layers of plastic on one product?

Hanekom makes reference to the amount of jobs that the recycling sector creates. Waste pickers are an important part of our waste management system, sorting through waste in far from ideal conditions, like landfill sites or in the streets.

Although they are responsibl­e for a large quantity of materials being diverted from landfill, we are investing very little in this key component of our waste management system, according to the South African Waste Pickers Associatio­n. The glut of new plastic in the marketplac­e kills the plastic recycling economy, along with the livelihood­s of thousands of waste pickers.

To save our recycling economy, we simply need to stop making so much plastic.

Niven Reddy is a campaigner at groundWork, who co-ordinates the African region for GAIA. GAIA is the Global Alliance for Incinerato­r Alternativ­es, a network of organisati­ons who believe in a just, zero waste world centred around respect for ecological limits and community rights, where burning and dumping is replaced with people-powered solutions.

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