The Guardian (USA)

‘They lied’: plastics producers deceived public about recycling, report reveals

- Dharna Noor

Plastic producers have known for more than 30 years that recycling is not an economical­ly or technicall­y feasible plastic waste management solution. That has not stopped them from promoting it, according to a new report.

“The companies lied,” said Richard Wiles, president of fossil-fuel accountabi­lity advocacy group the Center for Climate Integrity (CCI), which published the report. “It’s time to hold them accountabl­e for the damage they’ve caused.”

Plastic, which is made from oil and gas, is notoriousl­y difficult to recycle. Doing so requires meticulous sorting, since most of the thousands of chemically distinct varieties of plastic cannot be recycled together. That renders an already pricey process even more expensive. Another challenge: the material degrades each time it is reused, meaning it can generally only be reused once or twice.

The industry has known for decades about these existentia­l challenges, but obscured that informatio­n in its marketing campaigns, the report shows.

The research draws on previous investigat­ions as well as newly revealed internal documents illustrati­ng the extent of this decades-long campaign.

Industry insiders over the past several decades have variously referred to plastic recycling as “uneconomic­al”, said it “cannot be considered a permanent solid waste solution”, and said it “cannot go on indefinite­ly”, the revelation­s show.

The authors say the evidence demonstrat­es that oil and petrochemi­cal companies, as well as their trade associatio­ns, may have broken laws designed to protect the public from misleading marketing and pollution.

Single-use plastics

In the 1950s, plastic producers came up with an idea to ensure a continuall­y growing market for their products: disposabil­ity.

“They knew if they focused on single-use [plastics] people would buy and buy and buy,” said Davis Allen, investigat­ive researcher at the CCI and the report’s lead author.

At a 1956 industry conference, the Society of the Plastics Industry, a trade group, told producers to focus on “low cost, big volume” and “expendabil­ity” and to aim for materials to end up “in the garbage wagon”. (Society of Plastics is now known as the Plastics Industry Associatio­n. Plastics Industry Associatio­n was not immediatel­y available for comment.)

Over the following decades, the industry told the public that plastics can easily be tossed into landfills or burned in garbage incinerato­rs. But in the 1980s, asmunicipa­lities began considerin­g bans on grocery bags and other plastic products, the industry began promoting a new solution: recycling.

Recycling campaigns

The industry has long known that plastics recycling is not economical­ly or practicall­y viable, the report shows. An internal 1986 report from the trade associatio­n the Vinyl Institute noted that “recycling cannot be considered a permanent solid waste solution [to plastics], as it merely prolongs the time until an item is disposed of”.

In 1989, the founding director of the Vinyl Institute told attendees of a trade conference: “Recycling cannot go on indefinite­ly, and does not solve the solid waste problem.”

Despite this knowledge, the Society of the Plastics Industry establishe­d the Plastics Recycling Foundation in 1984, bringing together petrochemi­cal companies and bottlers, and launched a campaign focused on the sector’s commitment to recycling.

In 1988, the trade group rolled out the “chasing arrows” – the widely recognized symbol for recyclable plastic – and began using it on packaging. Experts have long said the symbol is highly misleading, and recently federal regulators have echoed their concerns.

The Society of the Plastics Industry also establishe­d a plastics recycling research center at Rutgers University in New Jersey in 1985, one year after state lawmakers passeda mandatory recycling law. In 1988, industry group the Council for Solid Waste Solutions set up a recycling pilot project in St Paul, Minnesota, where the city council had just voted to ban the plastic polystyren­e, or styrofoam.

And in the early 1990s, another industry group ran ads in Ladies’ Home Journal proclaimin­g: “A bottle can come back as a bottle, over and over again.”

All the while, behind closed doors, industry leaders maintained that recycling was not a real solution.

In 1994, a representa­tive of Eastman Chemical spoke at an industry conference about the need for proper plastic recycling infrastruc­ture. “While some day this may be a reality,” he said, “it is more likely that we will wake up and realize that we are not going to recycle our way out of the solid waste issue.” That same year, an Exxon employee told staffers at the American

Plastics Council: “We are committed to the activities [of plastics recycling], but not committed to the results.”

“It’s clearly fraud they’re engaged in,” said Wiles.

The report does not allege that the companies broke specific laws. But Alyssa Johl, report co-author and attorney, said she suspects they violated public-nuisance, racketeeri­ng and consumer-fraud protection­s.

The industry’s misconduct continues today, the report alleges. Over the past several years, industry lobbying groups have promoted so-calledchem­ical recycling, which breaks plastic polymers down into tiny molecules in order to make new plastics, synthetic fuels and other products. But the process creates pollution and is even more energy intensive than traditiona­l plastic recycling.

The plastics sector has long known chemical recycling is also not a true solution to plastic waste, the report says. In a 1994 trade meeting, Exxon Chemical vice-president Irwin Levowitz called one common form of chemical recycling a “fundamenta­lly uneconomic­al process”. And in 2003, a longtime trade consultant criticized the industry for promoting chemical recycling, calling it “another example of how non-science got into the minds of industry and environmen­tal activists alike”.

“This is just another example, a new version, of the deception we saw before,” said Allen.

Legal ramificati­ons

The report comes as the plastic industry and recycling are facing growingpub­lic scrutiny. Two years ago, California’s attorney general, Rob Bonta, publicly launched an investigat­ion into fossil fuel and petrochemi­cal producers “for their role in causing and exacerbati­ng the global plastics pollution crisis”.

A toxic train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio, last February also catalyzed a movement demanding a ban on vinyl chloride, a carcinogen used to make plastic. Last month, the EPA announced a health review of the chemical – the first step toward a potential ban.

In 2023, New York state also filed a lawsuit against PepsiCo, saying its single-use plastics violate public nuisance laws, and that the company misled consumers about the effectiven­ess of recycling.

The public is also increasing­ly concerned about the climate impact of plastic production and disposal, which account for 3.4% of all global greenhouse-gas emissions. In recent years, two dozen cities and states have sued the oil industry for covering up the dangers of the climate crisis. Similarly taking the oil and petrochemi­cal industries to court for “knowingly deceiving” the public, said Wiles, could force them to change their business models.

“I think the first step in solving the problem is holding the companies accountabl­e,” he said.

Judith Enck, a former regional administra­tor for the Environmen­tal Protection Agency and founder of the advocacy group Beyond Plastics, called the analysis “very solid”.

“The report should be read by every attorney general in the nation and the Federal Trade Commission,” she said.

Brian Frosh, the former attorney general for the state of Maryland, said the report includes the kind of evidence he would not normally expect to see until a lawsuit has already gone through a process of discovery.

“If I were attorney general, based on what I read in CCI’s report, I’d feel comfortabl­e pressing for an investigat­ion and a lawsuit,” he said.

 ?? Clemens Bilan/EPA ?? The report says big companies may have broken laws designed to protect the public from misleading marketing and pollution. Photograph:
Clemens Bilan/EPA The report says big companies may have broken laws designed to protect the public from misleading marketing and pollution. Photograph:

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