You are here: NewsEight solutions against the plastic soup
Eight solutions against the plastic soup
5 August 2020
If we all continue on the current path, by 2040, we will create twice as much plastic waste, and the total amount of plastic in the ocean will be quadrupled. The current measures against plastic soup are inadequate. We won’t make it by banning bags and straws or improving the recycling of plastic, but change is possible! Radical, system-oriented, and globally applied solutions can reduce plastic pollution by 80%.
Reports on the plastic soup appear weekly, but the added value of ‘Breaking The Plastic Wave’ is that it puts things into perspective and provides methodological support for that analysis. There is no single solution to the problem. The report places eight solutions (including reduction, redesign, collection, and recycling) in relation to each other and relates them to different scenarios (whether or not to intervene). In addition, the researchers take factors such as population growth and geographical differences into account.
To give an example: a significant reduction in plastic can be achieved by tackling six categories of use; multilayer flexibles, business-to-business packaging, films, bottles, carrier bags, and food service disposables. The current measures mainly address the last two, but they represent only a small percentage of the total. Tackling multi-layer recyclable packaging (such as sachets) provides the most significant environmental gain, but this is not happening now.
WASTE COLLECTION NEEDED FOR THREE AND A HALF BILLION PEOPLE
One of the most important solutions is to improve the collection of waste, especially in remote places and countries where infrastructure is mostly lacking. This is known as the ‘collection gap.’ Currently, according to the researchers, an estimated 25% of waste is dumped directly into waterways.
Considering the increase in population, to close this gap, 500,000 new people will have to be connected to a waste collection service every day (!) from now until 2040. This is an immense task, especially for countries that do not have sufficient financial resources. The researchers combine this solution with other system interventions, such as redesign and an obligatory share of recyclate in plastic. This increases the value of waste and prevents plastic from being dumped. Recycling must be made more attractive by, among other things, levying a tax on new (virgin) plastic.
GRASSROOTS INITIATIVES AND HEALTH UNDEREMPHASISED
The report assumes a situation in which plastic will still play a dominant role in our daily lives. The starting point is to prevent plastic (macro and micro) from ending up in the environment. Two issues remain underexposed in the report: health effects and grassroots initiatives.
Measures that prevent plastic from ending up in the environment contribute to health. The researchers see this as an additional benefit. For them, the promotion of human health is not an end in itself. But this aspect will increasingly prove to be a game-changer. Based on more scientific insights, governments will set (additional) requirements for plastics to limit health risks. That is why the Plastic Soup Foundation has made human health one of the spearheads in the fight against plastic waste.
The zero waste-movement is also underexposed. These are initiatives that originate from local communities to live without waste. Residents no longer want to pollute their environment with plastic. It turns out that a much more substantial reduction of plastic is possible than the researchers assume.
This website uses some cookies which are placed on your device. Your web browser stores these cookies when you visit our Website: www.plasticsoupfoundation.org. These cookies will be retrieved when you visit or use our Website again. This allows us to recognise you as a previous visitor/user.
This website uses some cookies which are placed on your device. Your web browser stores these cookies when you visit our Website: www.plasticsoupfoundation.org. These cookies will be retrieved when you visit or use our Website again. This allows us to recognise you as a previous visitor/user.
Functional technology enables a website to remember information that changes the way the website behaves or looks, like your preferred language or the region that you are in. No personalised information is collected.
This consent is used to track visitors across websites. The intention is to display ads that are relevant and engaging for the individual user and thereby more valuable for publishers and third party advertisers.