In recent years, awareness around the plastic waste crisis has grown, with emerging evidence, consumer demands, and extensive media coverage putting significant pressure on governments to take action, and businesses to make major public commitments to reduce plastic waste.
The global issue surrounding plastic waste is too big to be ignored. Research from the Pew Charitable Trusts and SYSTEMIQ indicates that 11 million metric tons of plastic flowed into oceans in 2016, and this number is projected to be 29 million metric tons in 2040. The same research found that 40% of today’s global plastic waste ends up in the environment. And, single-use plastics are the main culprit.
Single-use plastic products are often disposed of improperly, coupled with the challenges faced by many municipal waste management systems to achieve high recovery rates. The result is massive amounts of waste that we often forget about once our take-out containers hit the garbage bin. Before the COVID-19 pandemic hit, global decision-makers were beginning to make real progress towards eliminating single-use plastics. However, many of these gains were lost when the pandemic hit, as reusable items like grocery bags and coffee cups were abandoned over fears of virus transmission. Instead, their single-use counterparts came back with a vengeance as a way to limit human-to-human contact.
While it doesn’t appear likely that single-use plastics are here to stay at current levels, progress toward reducing their usage will certainly be delayed. Change is still possible if governments, enterprises and consumers are willing to collaborate on innovative ways to address this global crisis and get progress back on track. To understand how to move forward, it’s useful to first look at where the world has been.
In recent years, awareness around the plastic waste crisis has grown, with emerging evidence, consumer demands, and extensive media coverage putting significant pressure on governments to take action, and businesses to make major public commitments to reduce plastic waste.
China’s 2017 announcement that it would ban the import of plastic waste from around the world was a catalyst for change – and the world took notice. China has imported a cumulative 45% of plastic waste imports since 1992, and countries like the United States, which largely depended on China to take its plastic waste, saw their plastic recycling programs disrupted and suddenly had to rethink their approach to waste management. As a result of China’s ban, much of that waste was diverted to other Asian countries including Thailand, which has one of the highest per capita rates of plastic waste. This prompted the country to take action with a single-use plastics ban of its own. In North America, Canada announced it would ban some single-use plastics in 2021. And local action was taken in the US with states like California and Massachusetts eliminating, or working to eliminate, certain plastics.
With the onset of COVID-19, countries put plastic-related policy on the backburner. Part of the global response discouraged the use of many reusable products in an effort to slow the spread. This caused restrictions to be lifted on single-use plastic bags and food containers, prompting these products to make a comeback in places where they were being phased out. The use of personal protective equipment (PPE) has only added to plastic waste. Everything from face shields to latex gloves and masks were being produced and disposed of at exponential rates. Much of that waste hasn’t been recycled or properly disposed of, severely hampering efforts to reduce the amount of plastics in the environment. Examples of the virus’s impact can be seen in the following countries:
What needs to happen in order to regain progress toward reducing the use of single-use plastics? Governments, businesses and NGOs can build back momentum together by continuing to focus on three key areas: innovation, waste management and policy reforms, and evidence-based decision-making. And this must be done within the parameters of our Next Normal – where depending on single-use plastics is not necessary, and economies are rebuilt to optimise reusables and design-out waste. Let’s take a closer look at those areas requiring action:
The plastics crisis will outlive the COVID-19 crisis. Some of the progress made before the pandemic has been pulled back, and a “reawakening” or “reeducation” period may be needed to get the world re-focussed on the problem. The pandemic may accelerate innovation in solving the single-use plastics issue, but it requires the global community to seize the opportunity. The solutions mentioned above cannot exist in isolation, but rather they must work collaboratively to make a significant impact. Perhaps those developments, combined with the resurgence of the projects and policies that were derailed by COVID-19, will put the world in an even stronger position to limit or replace single-use plastics, reducing waste on a global scale.