Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

One word: plastics

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Will California show the nation how to take on the enormous problem of single-use plastic? Or will state lawmakers chicken out under heavy lobbying by plastic makers who are happy to continue to cover the world in discarded water bottles, used food wrappers and countless other pieces of disposable packaging?

We will find out soon. It’s not an overstatem­ent to say that the fate of one of the world’s biggest sources of pollution hangs on the passage of the California Circular Economy and Plastic Pollution Reduction Act. This legislatio­n—which will be passed or die on Friday, the last day for the Legislatur­e to pass new bills this year—would fundamenta­lly reshape the product packaging industry by requiring products sold in the state to be wrapped in material that is being recycled or composted at a 75 percent rate by 2030.

This is important because even though most plastic is theoretica­lly recyclable, very little of it actually gets recycled. Most of it can be found somewhere in our environmen­t, possibly as tiny particles in the ocean or the food you’re eating. Even while plastic production has increased, the global demand for used plastic bottles and bags has all but dried up. If the bill becomes law, manufactur­ers over the next decade will have to build recycling plants for their plastic detergent containers and potato chip bags (creating manufactur­ing jobs! President Trump’s gonna love this law), or repackage them in a material that is compostabl­e or already recycled at a high rate, such as glass.

And if California—which has the fifth-largest economy on the planet— demands sustainabl­e packaging, the world’s manufactur­ers will listen.

What’s remarkable is how many organizati­ons that stand to be affected have dropped their initial opposition, including the California Retailers Associatio­n, the American Beverage Associatio­n and the American Chemistry Council. The state’s grocers have gone one step further and now support the bill, which is really astonishin­g considerin­g that grocery stores would see many of the products on their shelves reconfigur­ed under this bill. Those businesses deserve a lot of credit for not standing in the way of a law that, while good for the planet, would force a big change to their operations.

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