FW: Plastic recycling is a scam

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Star Scott

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Mar 1, 2024, 7:26:15 PMMar 1
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Hey Green Labs Fam and other awesome folks,

 

Thought yall might be interested in checking out the article below. Warning: It’s a little depressing, but also raises some really valuable and important points. I know so many of us focus on recycling as part of our waste diversion efforts and this article reminds me of the tremendous importance of also looking upstream to sustainable procurement and policies that encourage the redesign and rethinking of these materials before they ever arrive on our campuses. Innovation will be critical to overcoming the plastics crisis.  

 

Like the article says, this isn’t suggesting we don’t recycle—it’s just reminding us we also need to be simultaneously (and vigorously) pursuing policy which protects our planet while “checking” corporate greed.  The laws surrounding plastics and extended producer responsibilities currently benefit corporations—yet, in order to solve this crisis, we need laws that support and prioritize environmental and public health.

 

On a side note, we’re beta testing 96 well plates and petri dishes on UGA campus right now that are ASTM certified compostable.  Curious if others are doing the same?

 

Best,

Star

 

Star Scott

Green Lab Program Manager she/her/hers

Facilities Management Division  |  University of Georgia

Chicopee No.1, 1180 E. Broad Street, Athens, GA 30602

Office: 706.542.7884  |  Fax: 706.542.7679

star...@uga.edu  | https://greenlab.uga.edu

 

I humbly acknowledge and honor the land and people of the Mvskoke/Muscogee Creek and Tsalaguwetiyi/Cherokee Nations on whose ancestral land University of Georgia is located, and I acknowledge and grieve for those enslaved people who were forcibly brought to these lands.

 

 

 

 

From: HEATED <hea...@substack.com>
Sent: Friday, March 1, 2024 1:09 PM
To: Star Scott <star...@uga.edu>
Subject: Plastic recycling is a scam

 

[EXTERNAL SENDER - PROCEED CAUTIOUSLY]

The fossil fuel industry has known for decades that recycling alone won't solve the plastic crisis. But it's spending millions to convince the public otherwise.

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Happy Friday—Emily here. Arielle’s been working hard this week, picking up the reporting slack while I’m home taking care of my mom.

Today she has a really great, comprehensive piece about the plastics industry’s decades-long campaign to convince the public that recycling can solve the pollution crisis, despite knowing it cannot.

This piece is free for everyone on the internet to read, just like the vast majority of our articles. But we can only keep our journalism free for all if readers with financial privilege continue to subscribe. So if you value our work, and have the means to do so, please consider supporting our 100 percent independent venture. It is literally the only way we make money, and it keeps us free from advertisers and other blood-sucking corporate media-funder ghouls.


Plastic recycling is a scam

The fossil fuel industry has known for decades that recycling alone won't solve the plastic crisis. But it's spending millions to convince the public otherwise.

Mar 1

 

 

 

A field of plastic waste in Athi River town, Kenya. Source: Tony Karumba/AFP via Getty Images

The plastic pollution crisis is so severe some experts say that it is now on par with the climate crisis. It shows no sign of slowing down, with plastic pollution expected to double by 2030. Over the next two decades, the amount of plastic in the ocean could reach 600 million tons, the same weight of 3 million blue whales.

But the plastics industry wants to assure the public that it has a solution. Last month, the industry group America’s Plastic Makers released a national TV commercial claiming recycling programs are addressing pollution. Recycling plastic is “making the planet cleaner and healthier,” the ad said, alongside images of windmills and solar panels. It said recycling is “making sustainable change” that will “benefit generations to come.”

There’s just one problem: the ad is a lie. Recycling—which works for materials like paper, glass, and aluminum—is not making a meaningful dent in plastic pollution. Only 5 to 6 percent of U.S. plastics are actually recycled annually, and less than 10 percent of plastic waste is recycled globally. The other 350 million tons of plastic waste generated each year ends up in landfills, incinerators, ecosystems, and bodies. One study estimates that each person ingests up to one credit card worth of plastic each week. 

And here’s the kicker: The plastics industry has known that recycling doesn’t work for decades. A new report from the Center for Climate Integrity details the deception, showing that the plastics industry has privately admitted in internal communication since the 1960s that the process is not effective.

Still, despite knowing that recycling can’t solve the plastic crisis, the industry has spent millions on ads trying to convince the public otherwise. Because when your primary objective is profit, you’d rather see world covered in your product than a world that simply uses less.

HEATED’s climate journalism is supported entirely by readers—no advertisers, billionaires, or corporate sponsors. Help ensure the future of 100 percent independent reporting by becoming a free or paid subscriber today.

How plastic insiders talk about recycling

The Center for Climate Integrity has compiled heaps of evidence showing that plastics industry insiders have long known about the vast limitations of plastic recycling.

A 1994 memo written by a vice president at Exxon Chemical warned the plastics industry to hide its failure to meet its recycling goals because it was “highly sensitive politically.” Source: Center for Climate Integrity

One of the first documented admissions came in 1969, when Eric B. Outwater, a member of an early industry front group, told attendees of a conference on packaging waste that the economics of recycling are “virtually hopeless.” That’s because packaging made out of multiple types of plastic is “virtually unrecoverable after use,” he said. 

That same year, the industry group the American Chemical Society came to a similar conclusion, noting that the plastics industry would never truly embrace recycling on a massive scale unless it became profitable. 

“It is always possible that scientists and engineers will learn to recycle or dispose of wastes at a profit,” the group wrote in a report for Chemical & Engineering News, “but that does not seem likely to happen soon on a broad basis.”

A draft “Solid Waste Fact Sheet” created by the Vinyl Institute in 1986. Source: Center for Climate Integrity

A few decades later, in 1986, the trade association The Vinyl Institute reported that “recycling cannot be considered a permanent solid waste solution, as it merely prolongs the time until an item is disposed of.”

In 1989, The Vinyl Institute’s founder, Roy Gottesman, explained to attendees of a plastic recycling conference that  “Recycling cannot go on indefinitely, and does not solve the solid waste problem.”

The executive director of the Vinyl Institute shared this memo with other members of the plastics industry in 1989. Source: Center for Climate Integrity.

In 1994, a vice president at Exxon Chemical explained that recycling promises were often made for show. “We are committed to the activities, but not committed to the results,” he said at a meeting of the American Plastics Council, after the company missed its recycling targets.

Exxon’s Irwin Levowitz also advised the Council to keep quiet about missed targets. “[We] don’t want paper floating around saying we won’t meet [our] goal” Levowitz wrote in a memo, marked “HIGHLY SENSITIVE POLITICALLY.”

Notes from the American Plastics Council meeting on Jan 2, 1994 laid out their strategy to quiet public backlash to plastic waste. “We need to get out at the grassroots level and do guerilla warfare like our adversaries.” Source: Center for Climate Integrity

European plastic groups have also long acknowledged the limitations of recycling. “Recycling is not always the best option as it does not always effect [sic] greatest environmental gain,” explained the European Vinyls Corporation in 1993.

In 1996, a report from the Association of Plastics Manufacturers in Europe acknowledged that “there is a limit…to the amount of household plastics waste which can be mechanically recycled with environmental gain.”

Even the recycling symbols found on the bottom of plastic bottles and containers are a greenwashing tactic by the industry, according to state government officials. At the time of their adoption in 1990, the Connecticut Department of Environmental Conservation pointed out the truth: “The recycling symbol suggests that the plastic containers are made of recycled material or that they are recyclable. This is, in practice, generally not the case.”

A decades-long PR scam

Yet despite saying all this privately for decades, petrochemical companies have consistently claimed in ads, op-eds, and political advocacy that the plastic waste crisis can be solved by recycling.

The reason they’ve done this is not because they actually believe in the miracle of recycling. It’s because they fear the real solution to the plastic waste crisis: regulation on the production and disposal of plastic.

The Center for Climate Integrity’s new report details internal communications that reveal the industry’s motivation. In a 1984 memo, The Society of the Plastics Industry clearly laid out the stakes: Lawmakers “must see substantial short-term progress in the recycling of plastic containers, or else punitive legislation … will attack the problem head-on.”

In other words, without a convincing campaign promoting recycling, lawmakers would regulate plastic pollution. In the early 90s, plastics industry experts claimed that there were more than 500 bills proposals related to plastic waste management across all levels of government. “The call was to recycle or be banned,” an Occidental Chemical employee testified to Congress in 1992. 

To forestall future legislation, companies like Exxon, Chevron, Dow, and DuPont spent tens of millions of dollars in the 90s on ads promoting the benefits of plastics, an investigation by NPR and PBS Frontline. One DuPont ad claimed “We've pioneered the country's largest, most comprehensive plastic recycling program to help plastic fill valuable uses and roles.”

Another ad placed in Ladies’ Home Journal in 1991 falsely claimed that “A bottle can come back as a bottle, over and over again.”

An industry ad told Chicago Tribune readers that they should “Recycle Plastic to Save Landfill Space” to celebrate Earth Day in 1992.

The plastics industry even made materials for schools. One educational video falsely claimed that “most plastics can be melted and reused over and over again.” In a staff meeting about the video, an American Plastics Council spokesperson admitted, “it is propaganda.”

The results of the marketing blitz were successful. By 1995, a columnist for Plastic News wrote that “[t]he plastics recycling war is over. We should declare victory and put the money into cancer research.”

The industry’s recycling-focused public-facing messaging continues today. Last year, at a meeting of the United Nations negotiating a global treaty ending plastic pollution, industry representatives worked to influence the talks. The American Fuel & Petrochemical Manufacturers, an industry lobby group, told the U.N. that they are “committed to sustainably manufacturing the petrochemicals and derivatives for plastics.” Their solution was not to produce less plastic, but to recycle more.

In addition, in the last few years, plastic lobby groups have sold lawmakers on a new solution to plastic waste: “advanced recycling”, also known as chemical recycling. Chemical recycling is meant to tackle the difficulties of recycling different materials by using extreme heat or chemicals to break plastic into chemical elements.

But this type of “recycling” rarely produces new plastic; instead, the vast majority produce either an oil byproduct or hazardous waste.

Still, the industry is using “advanced recycling” promises to respond to the new report’s charges of deception. “We’ve set an ambitious goal for all US plastic packaging to be reused, recycled, and recovered by 2040,” Ross Eisenberg, president of America’s Plastic Makers, said in a recent statement. “Investments in advanced recycling can be a game changer to better manage our vital plastic resources.”

“We will not solve the climate crisis if we’re still producing plastic.”

According to environmental experts, the most effective solution to the plastic waste crisis lies not in recycling, but in producing less plastic in the first place.

One analysis published in the journal Science found that the world could cut 80 percent of plastic pollution by reducing plastic production and consumption, using alternatives like paper or compostable materials, and expanding waste collection in middle and low-income countries.

That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t recycle plastic at all, though. Studies have found that in order to reduce plastic pollution to zero, we’ll need to use multiple strategies—including increasing recyclable packaging. “We’ll have to make sure that more than 50 percent of plastic is designed to be recycled,” said Yoni Shiran, partner at sustainability consulting firm SYSTEMIQ, in a presentation with the U.N. Environment Program. 

But recycling alone isn’t enough—it has to be combined with producing and using less plastic. “If you do any of those things on their own you will not be solving the problem,” said Shiran.

And for changes to be truly effective, experts say they must be made by governments, not by individual consumers. A proposed bill in New York, for example, would cut the state’s plastic packaging in half over the next 12 years. Large plastic users like Amazon or Walmart would be responsible for reducing their use of single-use plastic packaging. Businesses would also be incentivized to use recyclable or refillable packaging, and required to pay for recycling their waste.

If passed, the bill would be the most comprehensive plastic packaging regulation in the country. But it needs support from the public to move forward.

“We need new laws that lead to systemic change,” Judith Enck, a former EPA administrator and president of Beyond Petrochemicals, told the New York Senate. “We will not solve the climate crisis if we’re still producing plastic.”


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