Toronto Star

House Democrats aim to address plastic waste issue at the source

Bill seeks to mandate deposits on drink bottles, force makers to pay for waste collection

- MICHAEL CORKERY

Recycle that plastic bottle. Drink from a reusable water bottle. Stop eating from foam takeout containers.

Solutions to the plastic waste problem are often described in terms of what consumers can do to help. But federal legislatio­n, introduced Tuesday by two Democrats in Congress, would shift responsibi­lity to the industries producing the plastic encircling the globe.

The bill, by Sen. Tom Udall of New Mexico and Rep. Alan Lowenthal of California, is one of the most aggressive, sweeping attempts to hold the plastics industry, beverage makers and other companies financiall­y responsibl­e for dealing with the waste they create.

The so-called Break Free From Plastic Pollution Act is a long shot, with no Republican co-sponsors and several provisions that seem sure to be nonstarter­s in an election year. But the legislativ­e effort at the federal level, even if a politicall­y unrealisti­c one, shows the growing sway of environmen­tal groups that have pushed to stem the flow of plastic waste into the ocean.

The legislatio­n includes measures that the sponsors argue will increase the nation’s meagre recycling rates, such as a national “bottle bill” that would incentiviz­e people to return their empty soda and water bottles by providing a 10 cent refund for each bottle.

It would also require companies that produce and sell food service and plastic packaging to pay for the waste collection, a burden that now falls primarily on taxpayers.

“The plastics pollution crisis has reached a tipping point and the American people are fed up,” Udall said in a conference call with reporters on Monday.

The bill calls for a pause on creating new plastic-producing plants, which have been a boon for the oil and gas industry and a job generator in states like Texas, Louisiana and Pennsylvan­ia.

As the supply of oil and gas swells but global demand shows signs of levelling off, plastic production is one of the fossil fuel industry’s most promising areas of

growth. That dynamic is causing concern about increased greenhouse emissions and poor air quality caused by the new petrochemi­cal plants, but it also means the oil and gas industry is poised to fight to defend its expansion.

There are some provisions in the bill that could find broader support, like mandating standardiz­ed labels on recycling and composting bins to help people more effectivel­y sort their used containers.

Most of the legislativ­e efforts to battle plastic waste have played out at the state and local levels, where officials have voted to ban products such as plastic bags. But even as these measures have taken hold in some places, beverage companies and plastics lobbyists have successful­ly beaten back other initiative­s like bottle bills in large part because of the costs it would impose on the industry.

The vast majority of used plastic has been ending up landfills, incinerato­rs or shipped to other nations, where its fate is far from clear. An increasing number of municipali­ties have stopped accepting most plastics to be recycled because the cost of collection and sorting the material is not worth it.

“The public has been sold a bill of goods,” Lowenthal said on Monday. “Very little of what is called recyclable is actually recyclable.”

 ?? CHANG W. LEE THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Legislatio­n introduced in Congress calls for a pause on creating new plastic-producing plants, which have been a job generator in several states.
CHANG W. LEE THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE PHOTO Legislatio­n introduced in Congress calls for a pause on creating new plastic-producing plants, which have been a job generator in several states.

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