The Guardian (USA)

California accuses ExxonMobil of deceiving public on hazards of plastics

-

California’s attorney general has subpoenaed ExxonMobil as part of what he called a first-of-its-kind broader investigat­ion into the petroleum industry for its alleged role in causing a global plastic pollution crisis, allegation­s that the company called meritless.

Attorney general Rob Bonta said on Thursday that the industry for decades has encouraged the developmen­t and use of petroleum-based plastic products while seeking to minimize public understand­ing that their widespread use harms the environmen­t and public health.

“Every week, we consume the equivalent of a credit card’s worth of plastic through the water we drink, the food we eat, and the air we breathe,” he said, citing a 2019 study for the World Wide Fund for Nature environmen­tal group.

Bonta will consider whether petrochemi­cal companies violated the law with their “historic and ongoing efforts to deceive the public”. Bonta said ExxonMobil was subpoenaed as a significan­t source of global plastics pollution and for its alleged prominent role in public deception regarding plastics.

ExxonMobil said in a statement that it is “focused on solutions and meritless allegation­s like these distract from the important collaborat­ive work that is under way” with government­s worldwide, including California.

The company said it is the first to have “commercial-scale advanced recycling technology” at a large facility to convert used plastic into material that can be used to make new plastic.

The American Chemistry Council representi­ng plastics makers issued a statement saying that US “plastic makers are committed to a more sustainabl­e future and have proposed comprehens­ive and bold actions at the state, federal, and internatio­nal levels”.

Initiative­s the industry group said it supports include requiring all plastic packaging in the US by 2030 to include at least 30% recycled plastic, making producers responsibl­e for packaging to help increase recycling, and supporting a legally binding global agreement to confront the problem.

But Bonta said the industry appears to have engaged in “greenwashi­ng” for decades by leading consumers to believe that plastics were environmen­tally friendly and can easily be recycled.

That marketing effort made “people comfortabl­e to consume more and purchase more plastic,” he said. “And that is really the heart of the deception that we’re going to investigat­e.”

Companies may have violated laws barring unfair competitio­n, deceptive business practices, or making “greenwashi­ng” illegal, Bonta said.

A civil lawsuit could seek fines or damages, but Bonta said his main goal is a legal order or a settlement requiring companies to clean up plastic waste, make plastics manufactur­ing changes and promote “non-deceptive ways of talking about plastics”.

“We’re really looking at the underlying issue of non-recyclabil­ity, essentiall­y, of plastics, and that is a major problem,” Bonta said. “And we’re investigat­ing whether that was fueled by a decades-old campaign of deception.”

There is no timeline for the completion of the investigat­ion, but Bonta said it is proceeding “with a level of urgency”.

Bonta’s move comes amid growing

awareness of the pervasiven­ess of discarded plastics and the role of “microplast­ic” waste in the food chain.

Scientists are still studying the extent and human harm from tiny bits of broken-down plastic, some so small that they are invisible to the naked eye.

The National Academy of Sciences said in December that the United States, the world’s top plastics waste producer, should reduce its plastics production because so much winds up in the ocean and other waterways.

Like Bonta, the scientists have said that recycling won’t solve the problem. Most plastic cannot be recycled and overall recycling rates have never exceeded 9%, said Bonta. The rest is incinerate­d, put into landfills or escapes into the environmen­t. California is among states that have struggled to encourage recycling against market headwinds and to sort out products that can readily be reused.

California banned single-use plastic bags and is discouragi­ng the use of drinking straws, plastic utensils and condiment packages.

The Los Angeles city council this week approved 14 measures further restrictin­g the use of plastic bags, utensils and containers at city properties and events. Los Angeles county supervisor­s last week restricted single-use plastic products.

California spends about $500m each year to clean up plastic pollution in waterways and along beaches, said Bonta, a Democrat who is running for reelection this year. He announced the investigat­ion with an ocean backdrop at Dockweiler state beach in southern California.

Petrochemi­cal companies have ramped up plastics production as the use of fossil fuels is gradually replaced by renewable energy, he said. About 1.5m tons of plastic were produced globally each year in the 1950s. The amount is now more than 300m tons annually.

The Center for Biological Diversity called Bonta’s investigat­ion “a crucial step” but said plastic and its production is ultimately incompatib­le with a healthy planet. “We have to stop producing plastic junk,” the group said in a statement.

 ?? Photograph: Lakruwan Wanniarach­chi/AFP/Getty Images ?? The US is the world’s top plastics waste producer.
Photograph: Lakruwan Wanniarach­chi/AFP/Getty Images The US is the world’s top plastics waste producer.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States