One million tonnes of plastic additives pollute the world’s oceans each year

Source: https://resource.co/article/one-million-tonnes-plastic-additives-pollute-world-s-oceans-each-year

Author: Josh Templeman

A new study has revealed that approximately one million tonnes of plastic additives leak into the planet’s oceans every year. The report – conducted by EA Earth Action – reveals the scale of pollution caused by these chemicals on an annual basis, with the organisation warning that, without substantial changes to production and waste management, the leakage of plastic additives into oceans and waterways could increase by over 50 per cent by 2040. The study – entitled ‘Adding It Up’ – further highlights that a significant portion of this pollution – approximately 116 kilotonnes – originates from plastic packaging materials alone.

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New report points out limitations of pyrolysis

Source: https://www.recycling-magazine.com/2023/10/27/new-report-points-out-limitations-of-pyrolysis/

Author: Recycling Magazine, Zero Waste Europe

Touted as a solution, pyrolysis – technology that heats up plastic waste in the absence of oxygen – produces a type of oil that industries argue can be transformed back into ‘virgin-like’ plastic. However, this latest report published by the environmental network Zero Waste Europe underlines the limitations of pyrolysis oil. Incompatibility with different plastic types, low yield, and contamination of pyrolysis oil means it must be diluted by a petroleum-based mixture, in some cases by a ratio of over 40:1.

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EU takes step towards recycled packaging

Source: https://news.yahoo.com/eu-takes-step-towards-recycled-125313518.html

Author: AFP

An EU push towards bloc-wide rules on recyclable packaging to cut plastic and other waste got initial support in the European Parliament on Tuesday. The nod by the legislature's environment committee paves the way for a parliamentary vote in November to set the lawmakers' negotiating stance with European Union member countries. The goal is to reduce the 190 kilograms (420 pounds) of packaging waste each European throws away annually, on average -- a mountain of plastic, polystyrene, aluminium, paper and cardboard that has grown by more than 30 kilograms per person over a decade, according to EU statistics office Eurostat.

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Banning plastic waste exports won’t solve the world’s plastic trash woes: Guilbeault

Source: https://www.nationalobserver.com/2023/10/20/news/banning-plastic-waste-exports-wont-solve-worlds-plastic-trash-woes-guilbeault

Author: Mia Rabson

The mountains of trash from foreign countries seen piling up around homes and temples in Myanmar are renewing calls for Canada and other wealthy countries to deal with their own plastic garbage at home, instead of exporting waste — and the problem — to the developing world. While there is some local trash in the heaps of plastic waste all over the township of Shwepyithar, in the north of Yangon, there is clear evidence of plastic packaging from foreign brands there too, including from Canada.

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Plastic packaging from a UK supermarket found dumped in vulnerable Myanmar communities

Source: https://www.independent.co.uk/climate-change/news/plastic-waste-myanmar-lidl-supermarket-b2431945.html

Author: Louise Boyle

Packaging from a UK supermarket has been dumped 7,000 miles away in a low-income township in Myanmar - raising troubling questions about how the West’s outsized plastic pollution crisis is being forced upon vulnerable communities with little ability to push back. Labels and plastic wrapping for bottled water and diet lemonade from a Lidl in Lichfield were discovered in the piles of festering garbage which engulf low-income areas of Yangon, Myanmar’s largest city.

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To ban or not to ban: Fixing the EU’s global plastic waste mess

Source: https://www.politico.eu/article/ban-fix-eu-pollution-plastic-waste-myanmar/

Authors: Leonie Cater and Louise Guillot

The EU has vowed to clean up its act and cut back on dumping its waste elsewhere. For communities in low-income countries bearing the brunt of Europe's trash, that can’t come fast enough. A joint investigation by POLITICO, Lighthouse Reports and other global media partners highlights what an uphill climb that effort will be, as legal loopholes and a lack of transparency facilitate the flow of illegal exports to countries like Myanmar, where local communities are confronted with the pollution caused by ever-growing mounds of trash.

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As companies buy ‘plastic credits,’ are they reducing waste or greenwashing?

Source: https://news.mongabay.com/2023/10/as-companies-buy-plastic-credits-are-they-reducing-waste-or-greenwashing/

Author: Charles Pekow

Pay someone to clean up a ton of plastic fouling the environment in a developing nation and get certified to create another ton. Then call yourself pollution neutral. This system of “plastic credits” is catching on globally, especially among corporations. Several organizations now sponsor a plastic credit certification process in Asia, the Pacific region, Africa and South America. But as of yet, no common standard or regulations govern the accuracy of the data on what is collected or how the collected material gets recycled and reused. In any event, critics note, the system only deals with the downstream issue of plastic already in the environment, and not the issue of the manufacture and use of plastic in the first place.

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Pacific delegates adopt the first ever amendment to the Waigani convention

Source: https://www.einnews.com/pr_news/662787571/pacific-delegates-adopt-the-first-ever-amendment-to-the-waigani-convention

Author: Secretariat of the Pacific Regional Environment Programme (SPREP)

The extraordinary meeting of the Conference of Parties (COP) to the Waigani Convention made history today as Parties to the Convention adopted its first-ever amendment marking a significant step toward aligning the Convention with international efforts to combat plastic waste. The Waigani Convention, a regional treaty aimed at tackling hazardous waste and other pollutants in the Pacific region, has long been a crucial instrument for environmental protection and sustainability.

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Canada promised to stop exporting unwanted plastic waste, but it’s still piling up

Source: https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/article-canada-promised-to-stop-exporting-unwanted-plastic-waste-but-its-still/

Author: Mia Rabson

On the northern fringe of Myanmar’s largest city is a township of nearly 300,000 people with a growing industrial base in textiles, consumer goods and food products. But north of Yangon in Shwepyithar, whose name in English means “golden and pleasant,” nothing is growing faster than garbage. And a lot of it isn’t even theirs.

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'Licence to hide': Western plastic waste dumped in Myanmar

Source: https://www.france24.com/en/live-news/20231013-licence-to-hide-western-plastic-waste-dumped-in-myanmar

Author: AFP

For several years sites across Shwepyithar township have been filling up with trash that chokes fields, blocks the drainage of monsoon rains and causes fire risks. The trash is the runoff of global plastic production, which has more than doubled since the start of the century to reach 460 million tonnes per year. "In the past, during the rainy season I could pick watercress from this field to eat," one resident told AFP, asking not to be identified for security reasons.

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Think that your plastic is being recycled? Think again.

Source: https://www.technologyreview.com/2023/10/12/1081129/plastic-recycling-climate-change-microplastics/

Author: Douglas Main

On a Saturday last summer, I kayaked up a Connecticut river from the coast, buoyed by the rising tide, to pick up trash with a group of locals. Blue herons and white egrets hunted in the shallows. Ospreys soared overhead hauling freshly caught fish. The wind combed the water into fields of ripples, refracting the afternoon sun into a million diamonds. From our distance, the wetlands looked wild and pristine.

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Skirting the law: Global companies exploit loopholes to dump waste in Myanmar

Source: https://www.frontiermyanmar.net/en/skirting-the-law-global-companies-exploit-loopholes-to-dump-waste-in-myanmar/

Author: Allegra Mendelson

On any given day, the Thai side of the Moei River is bustling with traders loading hundreds of boxes onto small boats or rafts that cross the narrow stretch of water to Myanmar’s southeastern Kayin State.  At one river crossing, Frontier approached a group of workers sitting around a shaded table, sheltering from the midday heat. One of the men stood up and asked, “What do you want to ship? We can take anything.”

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‘Hard to breathe’: Myanmar communities forced to live among world’s trash

Source: https://www.frontiermyanmar.net/en/hard-to-breathe-myanmar-communities-forced-to-live-among-worlds-trash/

Authors: Allegra Mendelson and Rachel Moon

A stench creeps through the air, carried by a gust of wind from the mountains of garbage piled along the streets of Yangon’s northwestern Shwepyithar Township. Some mounds are over three metres high – as tall as the houses lining the same concrete roads. “The smell from the dump site is strong. At night, when the doors are closed, the air is sealed out, but if the wind comes in from the east, it’s really bad,” said U Zeya Kyaw Moe*, a resident of Shwepyithar’s 11th ward. “Even adults sometimes find it hard to breathe and it’s very dangerous for young children.”

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Report: Hundreds of thousands of residents near Klang suffer from illegal industrial waste dump, gas from scavengers' fire

Source: https://www.malaymail.com/news/malaysia/2023/10/10/report-hundreds-of-thousands-of-residents-near-klang-suffer-from-illegal-industrial-waste-dump-gas-from-scavengers-fire/95395#google_vignette

Author: Hajar Umira Md Zaki

KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 10 — Residents near Kapar, Meru and Jeram reportedly complained of hazardous gas coming from industrial waste that was illegally dumped nearby, which has been exacerbated by illegal burnings. Utusan Malaysia reported that this affected more than 300,000 residents, with the villagers blaming scavengers for setting off fires to find scrap iron within the waste piles made up of plastics, coppers and other materials.

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Microplastics pose risk to ocean plankton, climate, other key Earth systems

Source: https://news.mongabay.com/2023/10/microplastics-pose-risk-to-ocean-plankton-climate-other-key-earth-systems/

Author: Claire Asher

Heart-wrenching images of sea turtles entangled in fishing nets, or dead seabirds with stomachs clogged by plastic trash, justifiably attract media and public attention. But zoom down to the microscopic scale and plastics are having far more pervasive, insidious effects on ocean life — even potentially impacting key Earth operating systems that keep the planet habitable. An estimated 12 million metric tons of plastic currently enters the ocean each year. This plastic debris gradually breaks down into smaller and smaller fragments — micro- and nanoplastics — which, while less visually striking, can have serious effects on marine ecosystems and may even pose a threat to the stability of Earth’s climate.

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