Plastics tax exceeds first year revenue estimates

Source: https://www.mrw.co.uk/news/plastics-tax-misses-first-year-target-17-08-2023/

Author: MRW Reporter

The plastic packaging tax raised more than £40m more than expected during its first financial year, raising £276m for the Treasury. Data from HM Revenue & Customs has shown that, as of 8 August, there were 4,142 businesses registered for the tax, which is levied on manufacturers and importers of plastic packaging components which contain less than 30% recycled plastic.

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Does California have a plastic bag ban or what?

Source: https://www.latimes.com/environment/story/2023-08-24/whats-the-deal-with-single-use-plastic-bag-bans

Author: Jessica Roy

The goals of

Senate Bill 270, the so-called plastic bag ban, spoke to the “three Rs” of waste reduction: Reduce the number of plastic bags Californians use, reuse the ones they receive, and recycle them once their useful life has ceased (the bags, not the Californians). The thin plastic bags that used to line every bathroom trash can and litter box in California were and are made of low-density polyethylene, or LDPE. More than 30billion of those single-use plastic carryout bags used to be distributed across California every year.

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Plastic Waste Chemicals Rule Spurs Criticism of EPA by All Sides

Source: https://news.bloomberglaw.com/environment-and-energy/plastic-waste-chemicals-rule-spurs-criticism-of-epa-by-all-sides

Author: Pat Rizzuto

EPA regulations to control health risks from chemicals made with waste plastic are colliding against concerns about greenwashing and desires to protect people who could disproportionately face injuries. Trade associations, 15 Democratic attorneys general, and environmental groups have recently submitted comments criticizing a package of regulations (RIN: 2070-AB27) that the Environmental Protection Agency proposed in June.

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Recycled plastic export report: June 2023

Source: https://www.rebnews.com/recycled-plastic-export-report-june-2023/

Author: Paul Sanderson

Exports were up in June 2023 reaching 25,351 tonnes compared to 23,031 tonnes in May. Incredibly, this made it the best month since April 2021 when 47,850 tonnes was exported. Although EU exports were broadly stable, there was an increase to Turkey, Malaysia and Vietnam that helped the growth.

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US plastic bale exports decrease

Source: https://resource-recycling.com/plastics/2023/08/22/us-plastic-bale-exports-decrease/

Author: Jared Paben

Exports of recovered plastics fell during the first six months of 2023, newly released federal trade statistics show. The Census Bureau recently published data for June exports, allowing Plastics Recycling Update to compare statistics from the first half of 2023 to those from the prior year.

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Tonnes of waste lying idle at Luxembourg border - pressure group

Source: https://www.luxtimes.lu/luxembourg/tonnes-of-waste-lying-idle-at-luxembourg-border-pressure-group/2464968.html

Author: Paula Santos Ferreira

A town near Luxembourg’s border with France has been accumulating tonnes of illegal waste for the past four years, a pressure group has said, echoing previous concerns from locals that polluters from the Grand Duchy and Belgium nip across the border to dispose of unwanted stuff. More than 250 tonnes of industrial waste, household waste and rubble have been dumped at Redange since 2019, just a few kilometres from Belval, the citizens' rights group “Colletif citoyen: j'aime la forêt” told media outlet Contacto last week.

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Maui is suing Big Oil

Source: https://www.exxonknews.org/p/maui-is-suing-big-oil

Author: Exxon KNews

The eyes of the world are on Maui, now the site of the deadliest U.S. wildfire in more than a century. As of this writing, nearly 100 people have been killed in the fires — but officials fear that number will likely be much higher in the coming days. For years, Maui officials have been sounding the alarm about the impact of climate change on their communities and fighting in court to hold polluters accountable for making such devastation all the more likely.

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Ban single-use plastics to reduce pollution, GAIA tells govt

Source: https://punchng.com/ban-single-use-plastics-to-reduce-pollution-gaia-tells-govt/

Author: Okechukwu Nnodim

The Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives, an international network working towards a waste-free world without incineration, has called on the Nigerian government to ban single-use plastics in order to effectively reduce the rise in plastic pollution. It made the call in Abuja during the INC-2 stakeholders engagement workshop that involved the Federal Ministry of Environment and operators in the sector. INC is the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee on Plastic Pollution under the United Nations Environment Programme. Its focus is to help manage the full life cycle of plastics, including their production, design and disposal.

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Fires in recycling plants caused by negligence: Expert

Source: https://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/fires-in-recycling-plants-caused-by-negligence-expert-185426

Author: Hurriyet Daily News

Numerous instances of negligence frequently result in fires at recycling facilities across the nation, an expert has warned, highlighting the dangers associated with it and lack of deterrent measures that are necessary to curb the problem. Associate Professor Sedat Gündoğdu, a faculty member at Çukurova University, gave insights to local media about the causes of recently increasing fires in recycling facilities, the measures to be taken and possible penalties.

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Using ‘recycled plastic’ in construction materials may not be a great idea after all

Source: https://grist.org/accountability/using-recycled-plastic-in-construction-materials-may-not-be-a-great-idea-after-all/

Author: Joseph Winters

Last month, the American Chemistry Council, a petrochemical industry trade group, sent out a newsletter highlighting a major new report on what it presented as a promising solution to the plastic pollution crisis: using “recycled” plastic in construction materials. At first blush, it might seem like a pretty good idea — shred discarded plastic into tiny pieces and you can reprocess it into everything from roads and bridges to railroad ties. Many test projects have been completed in recent years, with proponents touting them as a convenient way to divert plastic waste from landfills while also making infrastructure lighter, more rot-resistant, or, ostensibly, more durable.

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The scourge of plastic on indigenous people

Source: https://www.philstar.com/opinion/2023/08/10/2287538/scourge-plastic-indigenous-people

Author: Marian Ledesma

Indigenous people may not be your first thought when communities affected by plastic pollution are discussed, but the truth is that they are in the midst of some of the worst impacts of plastic. The fact is that plastic is everywhere – from the highest mountains to the deepest parts of our oceans – and that every stage of plastic’s life has harmful effects on people and the natural environment, both resulting in an enormous toll on indigenous people.

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Veolia LVP sorting plant in Dresden destroyed by fire

Source: https://www.euwid-recycling.de/news/wirtschaft/lvp-sortieranlage-von-veolia-in-dresden-durch-brand-zerstoert-100823/

Author: Stephen Lang

A major fire today completely destroyed the sorting plant for lightweight packaging from the dual system in Dresden. As the disposal company Veolia reported on request, the fire broke out shortly after midnight for an unknown reason. The building is in danger of collapsing and the damage to property cannot yet be estimated. The Dresden fire brigade is on duty with around 100 people. There were several vehicles and machines in the hall. Within a very short time, the flames broke through the roof of the hall. "Several explosions could also be heard," said the fire department. The main goal of the emergency services is to prevent the spread to neighboring buildings.

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Microplastics found in human heart tissues, both before and after surgical procedures

Source: https://www.acs.org/pressroom/presspacs/2023/august/microplastics-found-in-human-heart-tissues-before-and-after-surgical-procedures.html

Author: PressPacs

Everywhere scientists look for microplastics, they’ve found them — food, water, air and some parts of the human body. But examinations of our innermost organs that aren’t directly exposed to the environment are still limited. Now, in a pilot study of people who underwent heart surgery, researchers in ACS’ Environmental Science & Technology report that they have found microplastics in many heart tissues. They also report evidence suggesting that microplastics were unexpectedly introduced during the procedures.

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How the ‘circular economy’ went from environmentalist dream to marketing buzzword

Source: https://grist.org/accountability/circular-economy-plastics-recycling-reuse-waste-conference-seattle/

Author: Joseph Winters

At a conference in Seattle this summer, Coca-Cola set up shop in an exhibition hall to show off one of its most recent sustainability initiatives. A six-foot-tall interactive jukebox invited passersby to listen to “recycled records” — seven audio tracks that, according to Coca-Cola, represent the world’s first album made with recordings of the plastic recycling process. The project, produced for Coca-Cola by the DJs Mark Ronson and Madlib, was meant to celebrate Coke’s decision to move from green to clear plastic bottles for three of its brands: Sprite, Fresca, and Seagram’s. Because clear plastic bottles are easier to recycle than green ones, Coca-Cola said they would advance a “closed-loop bottle-to-bottle economy” that uses materials more efficiently and creates less waste.

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Markets sting recycling revenue for WM, others

Source: https://resource-recycling.com/recycling/2023/08/07/markets-sting-recycling-revenue-for-wm-others/

Author: Jared Paben

Fiber prices are slowly recovering from the rock-bottom values of late last year and early this year, but scrap plastic prices have fallen dramatically in recent months, taking a toll on the largest haulers’ recycling businesses.  For Waste Management (WM), strained recycled plastic markets have forced executives to revise downward their commodity pricing forecasts for the rest of the year.  

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