Plastic's Health Impacts Are Becoming Impossible To Ignore | Opinion

Source: https://www.newsweek.com/plastics-health-impacts-are-becoming-impossible-ignore-opinion-1811050

Author: Judith Enck, Beyond Plastics

Plastic has been creeping into our food, our air, our water, and our bodies for decades now, with most people blissfully unaware of its presence and health risks. But two catastrophes in the past six months suddenly made it impossible to ignore how plastic affects Americans' lives, health, and future. The catastrophes I'm referring to are the East Palestine, Ohio, train derailment and the smoke from Canadian wildfires that enveloped U.S. cities for days. If you're not already aware—and many aren't—these two moments have everything to do with plastic.

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Gov’t told: Ban importation of waste in PH, protect Filipinos’ health, environment

Source: https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/1798389/govt-told-ban-importation-of-waste-in-ph-protect-filipinos-health-environment

Author: Faith Argosino

MANILA, Philippines — An environmental group on Thursday appealed to the government to ban the importation of wastes into the country, warning of the hazards it poses to people’s health. EcoWaste Coalition reminded President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. to ratify the Basel Convention Ban Amendment, noting they had sent letters to the Chief Executive and Department of Environment and Natural Resources Secretary Maria Antonia Loyzaga regarding the matter in January.

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"Regrettable substitutions": Why it's hard to ban "forever" chemicals, according to experts

Source: https://www.salon.com/2023/07/01/regrettable-substitutions-why-its-hard-to-ban-forever-chemicals-according-to-experts/

Author: Matthew Rozsa

Teflon is probably the most famous of the products made with "forever chemicals," but it is far from alone among them. Although one would hope that governments would heavily regulate a product linked to serious health issues like cancer, high blood pressure and infertility, chemicals known as PFAS (short for per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances) are largely able to slip under the radar. This is in large part because of a process known as regrettable substitution — and experts tell Salon that it is helping polluters literally destroy human life on this planet.

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Walmart is America’s largest grocer — and a big source of plastic waste

Source: https://pirg.org/articles/walmart-is-americas-largest-grocer-and-a-big-source-of-plastic-waste/

Author: Faye Park

Every time you run to the grocery store, it can feel like you’re coming home with more and more plastic.  That pasta in a plastic bag that you could swear used to come in a cardboard box. The head of lettuce shrinkwrapped in plastic film. The berries in a plastic clamshell instead of a quart-sized cardboard basket. Our reliance on plastic packaging is a growing problem — and it’s fueling our country’s plastic waste crisis.

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Plastic Isn't Going Away on Its Own. Here's How to Fix the Problem | Opinion

Source: https://www.newsweek.com/plastic-isnt-going-away-its-own-heres-how-fix-problem-opinion-1808256

Author: Nicky Davies

"We are drilling for oil to produce plastic that we burn or bury a few months later. It is an economic and ecological absurdity." These were the words of French President Emmanuel Macron to the negotiators from 175 countries who convened for the Global Plastic Treaty discussions this month. Left unchecked, plastic production is forecast to triple by 2060. More than 700 groups, including civil society, Indigenous peoples, workers and trade unions, children and youth, and women's organizations, pushed the world's governments to come together to stop this madness and address the plastic crisis. This grassroots effort laid the foundation for what will become the Global Plastics Treaty.

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“Making packaging from new plastic is a licence to print money!” / Reinhard Schneider enraged by lobbyists; criticises low recyclate content in detergent industry

Source: https://www.plasteurope.com/news/WERNER_amp_MERTZ_t252890/

Author: PlastEurope

German company Werner & Mertz (W&M, Mainz; www.werner-mertz.com), a manufacturer of laundry detergents and cleaning products, is regarded as a pioneer in circular economy in the country. Since 2012, the PET bottles used by the company have been made of 100% post-consumer recyclate. “As far as plastics are concerned, Germany is steering politically against a circular economy,” said managing partner Reinhard Schneider in a recent interview with German newspaper, Handelsblatt. “Unlike for example heating oil or petrol, virgin plastic is exempt from mineral oil tax. That is a concealed subsidy,” added Schneider.

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INSIGHT: Recycled PET prices trending down amid weak US demand

Source: https://www.icis.com/explore/resources/news/2023/06/09/10894768/insight-recycled-pet-prices-trending-down-amid-weak-us-demand/

Author: Paula Leardini

HOUSTON (ICIS)–Demand for recycled polyethylene terephthalate (R-PET) is expected to remain moderate to soft in 2023 despite long-term recycled content goals, resulting in potential downward price pressure in the United States. To understand the US R-PET market, one must look at the basics of each major price driver including supply, demand production costs and quality.

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Walmart is America’s largest grocer — and a big source of plastic waste

Source: https://pirg.org/articles/walmart-is-americas-largest-grocer-and-a-big-source-of-plastic-waste/

Author: Faye Park

Every time you run to the grocery store, it can feel like you’re coming home with more and more plastic.  That pasta in a plastic bag that you could swear used to come in a cardboard box. The head of lettuce shrinkwrapped in plastic film. The berries in a plastic clamshell instead of a quart-sized cardboard basket. Our reliance on plastic packaging is a growing problem — and it’s fueling our country’s plastic waste crisis.

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Burning plastic waste for energy at odds with carbon neutrality

Source: https://www.chemistryworld.com/news/burning-plastic-waste-for-energy-at-odds-with-carbon-neutrality/4017584.article

Author: Cat Schofield

By 2050, converting plastic waste into energy will result in more carbon dioxide emissions than burning fossil fuels, a study by researchers in South Korea has projected. Their findings show plastic waste-to-energy conversion should be a far larger concern with regards to global heating than it currently is.

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Millions of People Collect Plastic for a Living. What Happens if It Goes Away?

Source: https://slate.com/technology/2023/06/un-plastics-treaty-waste-pickers-just-transition.html

Author: Erin X. Wong

Eighteen years ago, discarded plastic was common on the streets of Bengaluru, India. Strong winds carried loose plastic bottles and packaging, which piled up in drains after the rain. Indumathi, who uses only her given name, remembers the scene well, because back then, she tried to collect as much plastic as she could, searching behind bushes, climbing into drains, or waking up at 4 a.m. to check trash heaps before they were burned. She sold what she could to small-scale recyclers, braving an unpredictable income before eventually starting to work at a scrap shop full time.

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Low, lower, lowest: Has demand for European mechanically recycled polymers bottomed out?

Source: https://www.sustainableplastics.com/news/lowlower-lowest-has-demand-european-mechanically-recycled-polymers-bottomed-out

Author: Mark Victory, ICIS

Demand for European mechanically recycled polymers is the lowest it’s been for several years. Costs through the chain remain high and producer margins for many grades narrow. Players through the chain have reduced operating rates, summer convertor outages are expected to be protracted and there remains persistent expectation of consolidation in 2023 across all major recycled polymers.

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As plastic piles up in Mexico, waste pickers bear the burden

Source: https://dialogochino.net/en/climate-energy/371082-as-plastic-piles-up-in-mexico-waste-pickers-bear-the-burden/

Author: Melissa Godin

It’s a hot afternoon in Iztapalapa, Mexico City’s most populous borough. Under the baking sun, Enriqueta Loreto is separating recyclables from waste. Every day, she goes door to door, collecting people’s waste in the hope of finding objects she can resell. “Nobody protects us,” said Loreto, who carries out her work as a waste picker informally, without a contract or social protection. “The government does not recognise us, nor the waste workers’ union. We have no protection.”

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The everyday plastic products you can't use after July 1

Source: https://www.1news.co.nz/2023/06/17/the-everyday-plastic-products-you-cant-use-after-july-1/

Author: Jane Nixon

The big brother of the ban on hard-to-recycle plastics is about to progress as the second tranche of the phase-out approaches. It means New Zealand will become the first country in the world to ban plastic produce bags as the haste to reduce waste moves forward. It started with phasing out plastic microbeads in 2018. The following year single-use shopping bags were banned. Last October, a raft of throw-away plastic items like PVC food containers and polystyrene takeaway food and drink packaging were discontinued in the first tranche of the phase-out.

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Inside Indiana’s ‘Advanced’ Plastics Recycling Plant: Dangerous Vapors, Oil Spills and Life-Threatening Fires

Source: https://insideclimatenews.org/news/16062023/indiana-advanced-plastics-recycling-vapors-spills-fires/

Author: James Bruggers

ASHLEY, Ind.—Two years ago on a Friday evening in May, Kory Kistler was getting ready to leave work at a recycling plant marketed by its owners as being on the front line in a global war against plastic waste. Then all hell broke loose. Flammable, 700-degree vapors began spewing from a valve on a pump at the plant. “All of a sudden my operators on the ground started screaming over the radio,” recalled Kistler, a former Marine and a resident of Fort Wayne, 35 miles to the south. “It was hard to understand anything they were saying. So I was like, ‘I’ll go down, check it out and see what’s going on.’ And as soon as I walk outside, I see clouds of vapor in the sky.”

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Minnesota sues Reynolds and Walmart over collection bags

Source: https://resource-recycling.com/recycling/2023/06/12/minnesota-sues-reynolds-and-walmart-over-collection-bags/

Author: Jared Paben

Reynolds Consumer Products faces yet another lawsuit over its recyclables collection bags, this time from Minnesota’s top legal officer. Provided by the office of Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison on June 6 filed a lawsuit against Reynolds and Walmart, accusing them of deceiving consumers with their marketing of Hefty brand recycling bags. Filed in Ramsey County district court, the complaint argues the bags themselves aren’t recyclable in the state and, when placed at the curb, render the whole bag full of materials unrecyclable.

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