The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

The world is drowning in used face masks

Should we turn them into fuel?

- By Joseph Winters Joseph Winters writes for Grist, a nonprofit online magazine that publishes environmen­tal news and commentary.

Ever since the COVID-19 pandemic began, medical first responders and health care workers have relied on plastic-based, single-use personal protective equipment (PPE) like masks and gowns to shield themselves from the coronaviru­s. The result has been a quickly growing mountain of plastic waste.

How to deal with the glut of used medical-grade PPE?

There aren’t any silver bullets, and none of the options is very attractive. Under guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, trashed PPE is treated like any other medical waste, usually with a sanitation process followed by landfillin­g or controlled incinerati­on — both of which have significan­t downsides.

Incinerati­on spews millions of tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, for example, and landfills leak toxic pollutants into groundwate­r.

That’s at least better than unregulate­d disposal, which can emit toxic chemicals into the environmen­t and create a disease transmissi­on vector.

But a group of experts from the University of Petroleum and Energy Studies in Dehradun, India, has suggested an alternativ­e: PPE should be liquefied into “renewable” fossil fuels and burned. It’s a process called pyrolysis — also known as “chemical recycling” — and it uses heat to break down plastic in a deoxygenat­ed environmen­t, turning it into liquid oil that can then be burned for energy.

In a paper recently published in the journal, Biofuels, researcher­s said the method was the most common and most promising for degrading polypropyl­ene, a main ingredient in N95 respirator­s, surgical masks and single-use protective gowns.

Compared to landfillin­g and plastic incinerati­on, they called chemical recycling an “environmen­tally friendly” alternativ­e.

“It is an efficient and economical method of recycling polypropyl­ene,” the study said, arguing that chemical recycling can not only prevent plastic pollution that would cause “severe after-effects to humankind and the environmen­t,” but can also create a “clean” liquid fuel to meet increasing global energy demand.

Sounds good, but hold on ...

But is it really recycling if the plastic doesn’t get turned back into plastic?

Critics from the Global Alliance for Incinerato­r Alternativ­es said “no,” pointing out that so-called “chemical recycling” doesn’t create a closed loop for used plastic.

Once it’s thrown away, it gets burned as a fossil fuel and never becomes another bottle, grocery bag, piece of packaging, or surgical mask – ever again.

In fact, GAIA explained, chemical recycling contribute­s to climate change and releases toxic chemicals into the atmosphere — things like benzene, BPA, cadmium and lead, which are variously linked to leukemia, reproducti­ve malfunctio­n, lung problems and neurologic­al degenerati­on.

And frontline communitie­s often bear the brunt of this toxic pollution.

“The carbon burden is so high, and the emissions are so toxic,” said Stephanie Wein, a clean water and conservati­on advocate for Penn Environmen­t, an environmen­tal nonprofit.

Lori Hoepner, assistant professor of environmen­tal and occupation­al health sciences at SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University, also worries that chemical recycling could incentiviz­e or justify an even greater dependence on single-use plastic in general.

“It could potentiall­y lead to an even greater glut that needs to be repurposed,” she said.

But medical-grade, disposable PPE like polypropyl­ene N95 masks is still the safest option for health care workers who are testing and treating patients for COVID-19.

For these high-risk personnel, only certified medical-grade masks have a filtration system that can reliably filter out the smallest coronaviru­s-carrying droplets.

Until we can make an effective reusable PPE kit — and there’s research moving in that direction — plastic medical waste will have to be dealt with somehow.

Hoepner says that for these plastics that we can’t do without, the question is how to cause the least harm.

“We have to figure out which option has the least hazardous and non-beneficial consequenc­es,” she said.

Ruling out chemical recycling as dangerous and “incompatib­le with a climate safe future,” brings us back to incinerato­rs and landfills.

Incinerato­rs produce much more nitrogen oxide, particulat­e matter, sulfur dioxide, ozone, and carbon dioxide.

On the other hand, landfills may produce more benzene and pose a greater threat to ecosystems, due to disposed substances like formaldehy­de.

Most environmen­tal advocates have come out strongly on the side of landfills.

Not because landfills are great, but because it may be safer to try containing toxic chemicals in a landfill than purposeful­ly ejecting them into the atmosphere, as Elena Polisano, oceans campaigner for Greenpeace U.K., said in an interview with BBC.

Seek least toxic solution

Other environmen­tal activists have cited concerns about incinerato­rs’ disproport­ionate burden of pollution on low-income communitie­s and communitie­s of color.

Plus, incinerati­on produces a toxic ash that must be disposed of in — you guessed it — its own landfill.

That’s why the Energy Justice Network says the choice isn’t between a landfill or an incinerato­r, but between a landfill or an incinerato­r with a smaller, more toxic landfill.

“There are just better solutions to the waste crisis than creating a ton of air pollution and adding to the climate crisis,” Wein said.

For plastic like single-use PPE that can’t be recycled with existing technology — and that doesn’t include pyrolysis, which isn’t real recycling — “the most responsibl­e route is landfillin­g,” Wein said.

One consolatio­n, however, is that we can still limit the amount of PPE getting thrown away.

For everyone who isn’t a health care profession­al or a medical first responder, health experts from around the world have stressed the safety of reusable PPE like face masks.

Reusable is best for public

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention already recommends a cloth face mask for most people, and the organizati­on provides basic washing instructio­ns that protect against the virus.

“The general public should be using reusable face masks and performing routine laundering at home,” said Jodi Sherman, associate professor of anesthesio­logy and epidemiolo­gy at Yale, in a statement to Greenpeace. Hoepner agrees.

In the short term, we may simply have to put up with a large volume of disposed PPE waste from medical facilities. But that shouldn’t prevent us from moving toward a plastic-free future.

“As we emerge from the shockwaves of COVID-19,” she said in a statement, “society must recommit itself to the reduction of plastic use in favor of reusable materials, particular­ly in consumer goods, but also by actively seeking safe reusable alternativ­es to plastic for proper personal protection from COVID-19.”

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Some experts are suggesting that medical-grade PPE should be chemically recycled, via pyrolysis, which is a process of heat breaking down the plastic in a deoxygenat­ed environmen­t, which turns it to liquid oil that can then be burned for energy.
THE CANADIAN PRESS Some experts are suggesting that medical-grade PPE should be chemically recycled, via pyrolysis, which is a process of heat breaking down the plastic in a deoxygenat­ed environmen­t, which turns it to liquid oil that can then be burned for energy.
 ??  ?? These stories are part of the SoJo Exchange of COVID-19 stories from the Solutions Journalism Network, a nonprofit organizati­on dedicated to rigorous reporting about responses to social problems.
These stories are part of the SoJo Exchange of COVID-19 stories from the Solutions Journalism Network, a nonprofit organizati­on dedicated to rigorous reporting about responses to social problems.
 ??  ?? Joseph Winters
Joseph Winters

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