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How we might break the plastic habit

Featured Replies

How we might break the plastic habit

By The Nation

 

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A global ‘treaty’ under consideration could be the catalyst to reducing the ruinous waste

 

Convenience and cheap production costs and retail prices have, over the course of seven decades, made the use of plastic products a global habit. Current annual production is estimated to be in excess of 300 million tonnes. 

 

The price we pay for that convenience and cheapness is no longer hidden, of course. Most plastic goods are designed for temporary use, and sure enough, we throw away about half of all that we acquire. Everywhere you look nowadays, even in rural areas, plastic waste litters the environment. Even in places where few people get to look, like the middle of the oceans, vast islands of plastic refuse are swirling in the currents, maelstroms of garbage deadly to marine life and thus a threat to humanity too.

 

Over the next two decades, plastic waste that isn’t properly collected and managed or recycled is set to double, from 21 million tonnes per year 

currently, due chiefly to relentless population growth. About eight million tonnes of the plastic we now discard ends up in the seas, where fish and turtles mistake it for food, swallow it and either choke to death or die of starvation because what they’ve consumed can’t be digested and they have no room for real food.

 

A proposal by Marco Lambertini, a scientist and director-general of WWF International, holds some potential. His idea for a global “plastic treaty” to tackle the issue will soon come before the United Nations Environment Programme for consideration. If adopted, it might get governments to act both on their own and in tandem with other countries for better management of plastic products, focusing mainly on single-use and non-recyclable plastic.

 

Better still would be decisive action on the part of the oil and gas industry, which produces the raw materials for making all forms of plastic.

 

Countries signing on to the plastic treaty would be required to set targets for reducing the production and consumption of single-use 

plastic – shopping bags, drinking straws, food and beverage containers and packaging. They would agree to work together to standardise the 

collection, management and  recycling of plastic waste. At present, less than 15 per cent of all plastic is recycled. All the rest is deemed unsuitable for recycling, usually for lack of technology and a system to do so, and that too has to change.

 

Governments aligned in the treaty would have to formulate policies to encourage the private sector to invest in creating biodegradable substitutes for plastic. Given the urgency of the problem, tax breaks and other incentives should feature prominently in these national policies. We desperately need to reduce the use of existing plastics and develop new materials more friendly to the environment. What we use and toss aside today contributes massively to climate change. 

 

Efforts to tackle the issue must most urgently find solutions upstream, in the oil and gas industry. Then the focus can move to midstream – the retailers and distributors. Finally, at the downstream level, billions of consumers – especially in regions such as Asia where populations and middle classes are growing fastest – will have to be weaned off an old and life-crippling habit.

 

Without the political will to make a difference, followed by the cooperation of big business and society as a whole, it will be impossible to end our reliance on single-use plastic.

 

Source: http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/opinion/30365406

 

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-- © Copyright The Nation 2019-03-08
 
3 minutes ago, webfact said:

garbage deadly to marine life and thus a threat to humanity too.

In the last couple of years pretty much every country in the world has rallied behind this cause - we need to get rid of plastic.

 

Lets skip back in time 10 years - there was no problem that anyone was aware of.

 

What's changed since then?

 

Whatever it is, it's big and they're keeping it kind of quiet. Even countries like Iran and Saudi Arabia are backing this move to reduce plastic wherever it's used and these are the countries which usually don't give a shit what the rest of the world thinks.

 

There's some information about this issue that we're not being told. I'm not quite sure what it is but I'm pretty sure that it's really bad, it has to be or it wouldn't unite so many countries (some who hate each other) in the effort to make this change.

"...We desperately need to reduce the use of existing plastics and develop new materials more friendly to the environment. What we use and toss aside today contributes massively to climate change..."

 

The sentence above is correct.

 

However, there are always those who claim that it isn't a problem, or that it is a natural occurrence, or that it is the 'Liberals' who want it so it must be opposed, or that a clean environment is somehow 'Socialism', etc.

 

It is all of humanity that causes pollution is one form or another, but sadly it is a small, powerful minority that prevents humanity from cleaning it up.

 

Sadly, I don't see this particular issue being handled any differently from Climate Change.

 

46 minutes ago, ukrules said:

"Lets skip back in time 10 years - there was no problem that anyone was aware of. "


Are you serious?

 

2 hours ago, wisperone said:


Are you serious?

 

I read it as he is mocking those that have newly discovered the plastic problem.

  • Popular Post

Stand beside any food cart and just watch the plastic and foam insanity....an absolute disgrace ...

Edited by mok199

I use about 5-6 bags a year.  My great sin is bottled water.  I prefer restaurants with filtered water or glass bottled water. 

4 hours ago, webfact said:

political will

Has solved very little.   Technology does far more.   Bags need to be biodegradable

  • Popular Post
10 minutes ago, yellowboat said:

I use about 5-6 bags a year.  My great sin is bottled water.  I prefer restaurants with filtered water or glass bottled water. 

Has solved very little.   Technology does far more.   Bags need to be biodegradable

I've posted video clips on here many times before about how poorer countries are doing this already, by making non-plastic bags from cassava.

 

Now, there does appear to be a Thai company doing something:

The Sunbio brand of compostable T-shirt bags and straws made from corn, tapioca and sugarcane, which they claim are 100 per cent compostable within 180 days.

http://www.thantawan.com/eco_absolute.php

While this company does also produce a lot of plastic products, from what I can find it does seem to be the first one going down the biodegradable route.

 

Ban single use plastic world-wide.  Problem solved.  But there is no will to do this plus the Petro-Chemical industry no doubt lobbies every government that it can in order to produce and supply single use plastic products unimpeded.  Big Oil money says this will never change as it cuts directly into Big Oil's bottom line.  That's reality.

Like overpopulation, plastic bans at this point of time is shutting the barn door after the horse is out.  Yes, there are ways to cut back and clean up our oceans, but with ever increasing numbers produced it is a losing battle. 

One positive point is that there is enough landfill space to hold all our garbage for the next few generations, if people start using garbage receptacles and it is all picked up and transported properly

21 minutes ago, Skallywag said:

Like overpopulation, plastic bans at this point of time is shutting the barn door after the horse is out.  Yes, there are ways to cut back and clean up our oceans, but with ever increasing numbers produced it is a losing battle. 

One positive point is that there is enough landfill space to hold all our garbage for the next few generations, if people start using garbage receptacles and it is all picked up and transported properly

7,800 million of us.  all of our very responsible and well intentioned folks working on everything from "enhanced weathering" to Donald Trump's US Space Force project, which is next, are outnumbered by the folks much more effectively increasing our use of plastic as well as emissions of Co2 that are so powerful we measure them in parts per million (volume, I guess).  now to really nail it all, 6,400 million of us have never even been in an airplane once in their life yet and once they can afford to do so.... they will also be either fake "Climate Believers" or Donald Trump supporters that think with their prefrontal cortex.  not their emotions.  a tip of the hat to Skallywag, who also has his feet on the ground.  the good old Earth.  for a little while longer.    

Edited by WeekendRaider

6 hours ago, webfact said:

Countries signing on to the plastic treaty would be required to set targets for reducing the production and consumption of single-use

Set targets which are never met.. just more verbal garbage almost out-weighing the plastic variety!

12 minutes ago, hotchilli said:

Set targets which are never met.. just more verbal garbage almost out-weighing the plastic variety! 

You know what we need:

image.png.aa9faa65df19e18e8154d5ca0521e735.png

Team America - Whirled Police

 

Edited by bluesofa
addendum

Stand beside any food cart and just watch the plastic and foam insanity....an absolute disgrace ...
Are there alternative containers for
"super heated noodles to go" that are cheap and readily available....the foam yes I've seen some paper alternatives....more expensive maybe ? yes paper cups for drinks but a plastic bag of coca cola hanging from the motorbike wing mirror is still popular...and cheap...
If I was earning 350 baht per day I'd be looking for the cheap option.

Maybe if the "Poom Jai Thai" party pledge
to make growing and ownership of marijuana gets enacted they can use hemp
Instead of foam or (wood pulp) paper
Just need to figure out how to make it waterproof ....errrm a plastic bag ? [emoji12]
8 hours ago, ukrules said:

Lets skip back in time 10 years - there was no problem that anyone was aware of.

 

What's changed since then?

The awareness. Social media and all that. And of course 7-11's multiplying like rabbits.

1 hour ago, johng said:

Are there alternative containers for
"super heated noodles to go" that are cheap and readily available....the foam yes I've seen some paper alternatives....more expensive maybe ?

I bought one of those multilayer lunch boxes for my daughter a couple of weeks ago from Mr. DIY, I think under 500baht. She loves it, has thermal insulation too. The cute pink color finishes the girly touch,

Edited by DrTuner

15 minutes ago, DrTuner said:

The awareness. Social media and all that. And of course 7-11's multiplying like rabbits.

I like rabbits. Don't know if I could eat a whole one though.

9 hours ago, webfact said:

At present, less than 15 per cent of all plastic is recycled. All the rest is deemed unsuitable

Well, that might be average. However there are countries with the highest output of plastic in Europe  - 220 kg/person - who can tackle the problem very well. They recycle 66% as Germany. The rest would also be possible to recycle but is too expensive. The technology is there, but you need more energy for recycling than for production of new plastic. This is the crucial point. 

8 hours ago, Samui Bodoh said:

What we use and toss aside today contributes massively to climate change..."

That's not right. We use less energy to produce plastic than for recycling 

Tesco are doing plastic free day every 4th of the month.....great time to shop as no queues...normally 4-5pm is packed everyday...not on the 4th

That plastic pollution in the developing world has increased considerably in the last decade is very true, My son did some voluntary work in Ghana 9 years ago, and it wasn't a big problem, He went back last year and was shocked at how much plastic litter there was. It isn't just because people are lazy, but a lack of municipal waste collection (and therefore no waste bins for litter) means you either pay for it to be collected, burn it or bury it. For many those options are not very practical either. Infrastructure, infrastructure is what the developing world needs. 

 

There are many recycling options (even one which turns plastic back into oil) but it all costs money .....

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