Civil society organizations describe illegal export of plastic waste as a “scam” and intend to get to the bottom of the matter

Source: https://nationworldnews.com/civil-society-organizations-describe-illegal-export-of-plastic-waste-as-a-scam-and-intend-to-get-to-the-bottom-of-the-matter/

Author: Nation World News Desk

More than twenty civil society organizations, representing most regions of the Spanish state, described the information learned this week as a result of the Civil Guard’s Operation Plastic as “reprehensible” and demanded that the next general elections in July Program 23 of the election, has waste management as a priority, which will allow to “solve the failure of selective waste collection in Spain, especially with regard to plastics”. This same forum of organizations, which in March already condemned the Kingdom of Spain for non-compliance with the recycling objective before the European Commission and prepared for 50% reuse in 2020, values, which it The Civil Guard, after being revealed, “It shows once again that we are not only talking about a management problem, but it is an alarming lack of control and a total absence of transparency”.

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Microplastics found in ocean samples across the world

Source: https://www.bbc.co.uk/newsround/65821849

Author: BBC Newsround

Microplastics have been found in every sample of sea water collected by sailors competing in a race around the world's oceans. During the Ocean Race competitors sail in some of the most remote parts of our seas, but not even these areas have escaped from plastic pollution. The level of microplastics found in the most recent samples were 18 times higher than the samples taken during the previous Ocean Race that ended in 2018.

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Petition for New Zealand to ban plastic waste exports to developing countries; slated as ‘waste colonialism’

Source: https://bit.ly/3MVM7QP

Author: Michael Neilson

Government officials have admitted they have no idea what has happened to the hundreds of thousands of tonnes of plastic waste shipped overseas to developing countries in recent years, including whether it actually gets recycled or ends up polluting the environment. The Herald can reveal since 2014, New Zealand sent over 300,000 tonnes of plastic waste overseas - mostly to developing countries with low or even non-existent environmental regulations around handling such waste.

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EU recycled content targets at risk from PET imports, cautions Plastics Recyclers Europe

Source: https://packagingeurope.com/news/eu-recycled-content-targets-at-risk-from-pet-imports-cautions-plastics-recyclers-europe/9896.article

Author: Packaging Europe

A major increase in PET imports threatens the EU’s capability of improving plastic waste management and its competitiveness in the industry, Plastics Recyclers Europe claims – responding with a call for fair policy covering imported plastics. EU trade data claims that India, China, Turkey, Indonesia, Egypt, and Vietnam were amongst the biggest exporters of a total 1.9Mt of PET imports between 2021 and 2022. Nearly 30% of the total demand for PET in Europe in 2022 was made up of imports, cites Plastics Recyclers Europe – a rise from the 23% reported in 2020. It is suggested that the increase could stem from growing demand for rPET in the EU, with prices rising within the European continent in anticipation of its target to implement 25% recycled content into beverage bottles by 2025.

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Finally, a solution to plastic pollution that’s not just recycling

Source: https://www.vox.com/down-to-earth/2023/6/7/23743640/plastic-pollution-un-treaty-oceans-waste

Author: Benji Jones

Plastic recycling doesn’t work, no matter how diligently you wash out your peanut butter container. Only about 15 percent of plastic waste is collected for recycling worldwide, and of that, about half ends up discarded. That means just 9 percent of plastic waste is recycled. The rest — some 91 percent of all plastic waste — ends up in landfills, incinerators, or as trash in the environment. One report estimated that 11 million metric tons of plastic trash leaked into the ocean in 2016, and that number could triple by 2040 as the global population rises and lower-income countries develop. Plastic is now simply everywhere: at the deepest depths of the ocean, on the tallest mountains, in hundreds of species of wildlife, and even in human placentas.

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Indonesia to phase out single-use plastic by 2029

Source: https://en.antaranews.com/news/283980/indonesia-to-phase-out-single-use-plastic-by-2029

Authors: Sugiharto P, Nabil Ihsan

Jakarta (ANTARA) - The government plans to gradually phase out single-use plastic utensils and packaging by 2029, according to Environment and Forestry Minister Siti Nurbaya Bakar.  She revealed that the items that will be phased out include polystyrene foam food packaging, single-use food utensils and plastic straws, plastic bags, multilayer packaging, and small-sized packaging.

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Thailand Ratifies Global Agreement to End Toxic Waste Trade to Developing Countries

Source: https://conta.cc/3PgBATp

June 7, 2023. Today, Thailand joins 102 other countries in their ratification of the Ban Amendment to the Basel Convention on the Control of Transboundary Movements of Hazardous Waste and their Disposal. The Amendment bans export of hazardous wastes of all kinds from developed countries (OECD, EU, and Liechtenstein) to developing countries. Thailand's ratification makes it clear that imports of such hazardous waste shall no longer be tolerated, while sending a strong and unequivocal message that Thailand will not tolerate any imports of hazardous waste from developed countries.

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The global plastics treaty can fight climate change — if it reduces plastic production

Source: https://grist.org/solutions/the-global-plastics-treaty-can-fight-climate-change-if-it-reduces-plastic-production/

Author: Joseph Winters

During the second round of negotiations for a global plastics treaty in Paris this week, diplomats have clashed over competing priorities — including the role of recycling and how to address toxic chemicals. But some experts are arguing that one issue in particular should anchor the ongoing talks: climate change. “It’s not just a plastics crisis; it’s a climate crisis,” said Kristen McDonald, senior director of the China program for the nonprofit Pacific Environment. “Everyone should be coming away from the global plastics treaty table this week understanding that.”

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Feds open to cutting plastic production but global agreement will be hard: Guilbeault

Source: https://www.thestar.com/politics/federal/2023/06/02/feds-open-to-cutting-plastic-production-but-global-agreement-will-be-hard-guilbeault.html

Author: Mia Rabson

OTTAWA - Canada is open to the idea of including a requirement to cut back on the production of plastic in a new global treaty to eliminate plastic pollution, Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault said Friday. But he said that may become one of the biggest sticking points in the negotiations, which are supposed to conclude at the end of next year. “The idea that we might have to commit to reducing the use of plastics will be something that’s going to be difficult for some countries to agree to,” said Guilbeault in an interview.

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After rough start, UN plastic treaty talks end with mandate for first draft

Source: https://www.reuters.com/business/environment/after-rough-start-un-plastic-treaty-talks-end-with-mandate-first-draft-2023-06-02/

Author: Valerie Volcovici

June 2 (Reuters) - After a rocky start to a week of negotiations, around 170 countries agreed to develop a first draft by November of what could become the first global treaty to curb plastic pollution by the end of next year. Country delegations, NGOs and industry representatives gathered in Paris this week for the second round of UN talks toward a legally binding pact to halt the explosion of plastic waste, which is projected to almost triple by 2060, with around half ending up in landfill and less than a fifth recycled, according to a 2022 Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development report.

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UN experts warn of “toxic tidal wave” as plastic pollutes environment and threatens human rights

Source: https://www.ohchr.org/en/press-releases/2023/06/un-experts-warn-toxic-tidal-wave-plastic-pollutes-environment-and-threatens

Author: Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights

GENEVA (1 June 2023) – The world must beat the toxic tidal wave of plastic pollution that threatens human rights, UN experts* said today, urging States and other stakeholders to put rights at the centre of the international treaty on plastic pollution currently under negotiation. Ahead of World Environment Day, they issued the following joint statement:

“Plastic production has increased exponentially over recent decades and today the world is generating 400 million tonnes of plastic waste yearly. All stages of the plastics cycle have adverse impacts on human rights. We are in the middle of an overwhelming toxic tidal wave as plastic pollutes our environment and negatively impacts human rights in a myriad of ways over its life cycle.”

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As Plastics Keep Piling Up, Can ‘Advanced’ Recycling Cut the Waste?

Source: https://e360.yale.edu/features/advanced-plastics-recycling-pyrolysis

Author: Judith Lewis Mernit

Bob Powell had spent more than a decade in the energy industry when he turned his attention to the problem of plastic waste. “I’m very passionate about the environment,” he says. To him, the accumulating scourge of irresponsibly discarded plastic ranks high on the list of environmental issues, “right behind global warming and drought.” In 2014, he found what he considers a solution: a suite of technologies that uses chemicals and heat to turn plastic into oil to manufacture more plastic.

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Study: Recycling, reusing plastics pose chemical risk

Source: https://resource-recycling.com/plastics/2023/05/31/study-recycling-reusing-plastics-pose-chemical-risk/

Author: Marissa Heffernan

A recent analysis by Switzerland-based Food Packaging Forum reviewed hundreds of scientific studies and concluded that recycled and reused food-contact plastics can accumulate and release chemicals of concern.  Published by Cambridge University Press, the study noted that reusing and recycling plastics can lead to “unintended negative impacts, because hazardous chemicals, like endocrine disrupters and carcinogens, can be released during reuse and accumulate during recycling.” 

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Hormone-disrupting chemicals found in 60% of 121 children’s products

Source: https://www.beuc.eu/blog/hormone-disrupting-chemicals-found-in-60-of-121-childrens-products/

Author: Stine Müller

In March, I participated in the annual national conference on hormone-disrupting chemicals held by the Danish Centre for Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals. One of the things I took home was that researchers are detecting bisphenols in the majority of urine samples from Danish families. Bisphenols are a group of industrial chemicals widely used in the manufacture of everyday consumer products such as plastic tableware, food cans, sports equipment, leather footwear and clothing. There is growing concern that some bisphenols can damage fertility and disrupt the hormonal systems of both people and animals. For example, the EU has identified Bisphenol A (BPA), the best-known member of the bisphenol family, as a ‘Substance of Very High Concern’, but other bisphenols are believed to present at least the same level of concern, according to the EU Chemicals Agency (ECHA).

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Tackling plastic pollution: ‘We can't recycle our way out of this’

Source: https://www.france24.com/en/environment/20230530-tackling-plastic-pollution-we-can-t-recycle-our-way-out-of-this

Author: Joanna York

The scale of plastic pollution is growing, relentlessly. The world is producing twice as much plastic waste as two decades ago, reaching 353 million tonnes in 2019, according to OECD figures. The vast majority goes into landfills, gets incinerated or is “mismanaged”, meaning left as litter or not correctly disposed of. Just 9 percent of plastic waste is recycled. 

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