Are Single-Use Plastics Also Contributing to Climate Change?

Made from fossil fuels refined with "extreme temperatures and significant amount of water and energy," plastics are also a climate problem, warns CNN. So "by the time we start talking about recycling, the damage is already done." One former regional administrator for America's Environmental Protection Agency is now even calling plastics "the new coal." The process of making plastic is so energy intensive that if the plastics industry were a country, it would be the fifth largest emitter of greenhouse gases in the world, according to a 2021 report from Beyond Plastics.... The plastic industry is responsible for at least 232 million tons of planet-warming emissions each year, according to the Beyond Plastics report. That's the same amount as the average emissions released by 116 coal-fired power plants in 2020, according to the report's authors. It's also the same annual emissions as around 50 million cars, according to the EPA. And more plastic-making facilities continue to come online.... [P]lastic recycling doesn't work, Enck said, because most of what we think we're recycling just ends up in the landfill. It also doesn't address the planet-warming emissions that comes from making it in the first place.... Ultimately, the world needs large-scale change to address the climate impact of the fossil fuel and plastics industries, said Jacqueline Savitz [chief policy officer for the conservation non-profit Oceana]. Oceana, for example, is working with local volunteers from cities and counties around the country to help pass new laws to reduce single-use plastics, in hopes of sparking change at the national level. "We think that if we could start to reduce single-use plastics at the local level with local ordinances, that can start to become more of the norm," she said. "Then we can start taking it to higher levels of government, even getting to the point of getting national policies that will drive reductions in plastic use." Ultimately, Savitz said consumers need to continue urging major corporations to provide plastic-free solutions and help support refill and reuse programs to encourage society to shy away from plastic use and stave off the worst impacts of the climate crisis. "Our country is burning and flooding and hurricanes are coming earlier and earlier," she told CNN. "I really think it's shocking that one of the things that's really leading to that is plastics, and it's hurting us in other ways, too. So if we could find a way to reduce our production of plastics as a country and as a global society, we'd be taking a bite out of climate change." CNN suggests ways you can reduce your own plastic consumption, including: Saying no to bottled water. "Get a couple of canteens and cut a major source of plastic out of your life."Going beyond just reusable grocery bags. "You can easily go a step further by not using the plastic produce bags the store provides for your apples and broccoli..."And when shopping, try to choose products packaged in paper over those packaged in plastic.

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