Microplastics discovered in the most remote Arctic regions

Source: https://www.earth.com/news/citizen-scientists-uncover-microplastics-in-the-remote-arctic/

Author: Chrissy Sexton

Vacationers turned citizen scientists have assisted a team of researchers in uncovering the threat of microplastics on the pristine beaches of the Arctic.  As the world grapples with the increasing scale of plastic production, tiny fragments of these synthetic materials, known as microplastics, have become ubiquitous, sparking fears of accumulation and consequent ecosystem damage in the Arctic due to ocean currents. Still yet, our understanding of the extent and nature of this potential Arctic plastic pollution remains sketchy.

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FDA Allows Ongoing Use of Toxic Chemicals that Leach into Food and Drinks

Source: https://earthjustice.org/press/2023/fda-allows-ongoing-use-of-toxic-chemicals-that-leach-into-food-and-drinks

Author: Zahra Ahmad, Earthjustice

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) today affirmed its May 2022 decision to allow the ongoing use of phthalates, a class of toxic chemicals, in food packaging and food production equipment. Health and environmental advocates had asked FDA to reconsider that decision based on mounting scientific evidence that phthalates in food cause serious health harm.

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Kenya being swamped with waste clothing

Source: https://www.africanews.com/2023/07/21/kenya-being-swamped-with-waste-clothing/

Author: Rédaction Africanews

Kenya is being swamped with waste clothing from other continents, a report by the Changing Markets Foundation claims. The report, based on findings by the Kenyan environmentalist groups Wildlight and Clean Up Kenya, says that "an overwhelming volume of used-clothing shipped to Kenya is waste synthetic clothing".  While the exporting of plastic waste is restricted under the Basel Convention, a voluntary agreement called the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Wastes and Their Disposal, a third of the old clothes shipped to Kenya is reported to contain plastic. 

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US-supported PET facility opens in Indonesia

Source: https://resource-recycling.com/plastics/2023/07/18/us-supported-pet-facility-opens-in-indonesia/

Author: Jared Paben

A company that specializes in collecting PET and other plastics at risk of entering the ocean continues to expand its collection infrastructure in Southeast Asia with support from the U.S. government. Prevented Ocean Plastic Southeast Asia (POPSEA) in June opened an aggregation center in the fast-growing Indonesian city of Semarang. The facility, which has a capacity of about 500 metric tons per month and directly employs 40 people, was funded through a blended public-private finance model that included a grant from the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). 

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Are plastic bale prices nearing bottom?

Source: https://www.recyclingtoday.com/news/are-plastic-bale-prices-nearing-bottom/

Author: Deanne Toto

Plastic scrap prices continued their descent in July as supply outpaced demand for polyethylene terephthalate (PET), high-density polyethylene (HDPE) and polypropylene (PP) recovered at material recovery facilities (MRFs) in the U.S.  A reprocessor based in the Southeast says natural HDPE bales have been selling in the low 30-cents-per-pound range as of mid-July, which represents a decline of 50 cents per pound over a five-week period. Mixed-color HDPE bales were selling for 8 cents per pound, down from nearly 20 cents per pound just a few weeks ago.

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Prices drop 40% for two key recycled plastic grades

Source: https://resource-recycling.com/recycling/2023/07/10/prices-drop-40-for-two-key-recycled-plastic-grades/

Author: RecyclingMarkets.net Staff

PET and HDPE prices have taken a sudden crash this month, dropping by double-digit percentages. Luckily for MRFs, most everything else in the curbside mix is holding steady.  The national average price of post-consumer PET beverage bottles and jars is down 44% this month. Bales of PET are now averaging 7.06 cents per pound, compared with 12.63 cents per pound this time last month.

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NOVA Chemicals plans large film recycling plant

Source: https://resource-recycling.com/plastics/2023/07/18/nova-chemicals-plans-large-film-recycling-plant/

Author: Jared Paben

Plastic resin giant NOVA Chemicals will build a large PE film recycling facility in Indiana. The facility will be operated by film specialist Novolex. By 2026, Calgary, Alberta-headquartered NOVA plans to produce 113 million pounds per year of recycled polyethylene pellets at the plant in Connersville, Ind., according to a press release issued July 18. Owned by NOVA, the plant will be operated by Novolex, a film and bag producer that runs its own film recycling operations in the Midwest.

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Poland to sue Germany over waste imports

Source: https://www.euractiv.com/section/politics/news/poland-to-sue-germany-over-waste-imports/

Author: Aleksandra Krzysztoszek

Warsaw will take Berlin to the EU Court of Justice in Luxembourg for allegedly failing to remove 35 tonnes of waste illegally transported to Poland by German companies and stored at seven sites in the country, Climate and Environment Minister Anna Moskwa announced on Tuesday. At a press conference in May, the Polish government expressed its will to sue Germany over waste. “I am convinced that as soon as this week, the complaint will be filed to the European Union Court of Justice,” Moskwa said on Tuesday, as quoted by Money.pl.

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B.C. phasing out single-use plastics, giving businesses six months to use inventory

Source: https://ca.style.yahoo.com/b-c-phasing-single-plastics-205840430.html

Author: The Canadian Press

VANCOUVER — British Columbia is phasing out the use of a range of single-use and disposable plastics with businesses being given six months to use up their inventory. Environment Minister George Heyman says the new regulation comes into effect in December and will cover plastic shopping bags, disposable food service accessories, degradable plastics and any packaging made of hard-to-recycle plastics.

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Stitch in time: France to help pay for clothes to be mended to cut waste

Source: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/jul/12/stitch-in-time-france-to-help-pay-for-clothes-to-be-mended-to-cut-waste

Author: Kim Willsher

A broken heel, a rip in trousers, buttons missing from a shirt? Don’t throw them away if you live in France, where the government will pay a “repair bonus” to have them mended in a new scheme aimed at cutting waste. An estimated 700,000 tonnes of clothing is thrown away in France every year, two-thirds ending up in landfill.

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The Microplastic Crisis Is Getting Exponentially Worse

Source: https://www.wired.com/story/the-microplastic-crisis-is-getting-exponentially-worse/

Author: Matt Simon

Not even the Arctic Ocean is immune to the incessant growth of microplastic pollution. In a new study that analyzed sediment core samples, researchers quantified how many of the particles have been deposited since the early 1930s. As scientists have shown elsewhere, the team found that microplastic contamination in the Arctic has been growing exponentially and in lockstep with the growth of plastic production—which is now up to a trillion pounds a year, with the global amount of plastic waste projected to triple by 2060.

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Plastic production creating greenhouse gases 'equal to 5.7m cars', conservation groups say

Source: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2023-07-10/plastic-waste-report-marine-conservation-society-wwf/102582230

Authors: Leonie Thorne, Evan Young and Penny Timms

Australia's annual plastic consumption produces the same amount of greenhouse gas emissions as 5.7 million cars, analysis released by conservation groups suggests.

report, commissioned by the Australian Marine Conservation Society (AMCS) and WWF Australia, says skyrocketing levels of plastic use are contributing to global warming and posing a significant threat to our ecosystems and wildlife.

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Australia’s annual plastic consumption produces emissions equivalent to 5.7m cars, analysis shows

Source: https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2023/jul/10/australias-annual-plastic-consumption-produces-emissions-equivalent-to-57m-cars-analysis-shows

Author: Donna Lu

The plastics consumed yearly by Australians have a greenhouse emissions impact equivalent to 5.7m cars – more than a third of the cars on Australia’s roads, new analysis suggests. A report commissioned by the Australian Marine Conservation Society and WWF Australia has found that the plastics consumed nationally in the 2019-20 financial year created 16m tonnes of greenhouse gases.

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A Glut of Made-in-China Plastic Will Dent Oil’s Growth Machine

Source: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/glut-made-china-plastic-dent-000000305.html

Authors: Elizabeth Low and Kevin Crowley

(Bloomberg) -- Once touted as a key driver of global oil profits, the plastics industry is staring down years of anemic margins as giant plants in China look set to send a deluge of production into the market. The construction of more than 20 petrochemical projects — to produce raw materials that go into making everything from plastic packaging to clothing and detergents — will be completed across China this year, said industry consultant ICIS.

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Compostable Plastic Is Garbage

Source: https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2023/07/compostable-plastic-trash/674626/

Author: Saahil Desai

In 2023, the options for a build-your-own fast-casual lunch can include wild Alaskan salmon, harissa honey chicken, cauliflower shawarma, seasonal roasted zucchini, preserved lemon vinaigrette, za’atar bread crumbs, creamy vegan feta, and skhug. But whatever you choose, it will all inevitably be served in a compostable bowl. As an office worker blessed (and cursed) with endless overpriced meal options, I have shoveled way too much random food into my mouth from a compostable vessel, using a compostable utensil.

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