plastics ban

Top Tweets
A view of a snow-dotted mountain range with a forest in the foreground.
A person's gloved hands installing solar panels on a roof.
Closeup of a wind turbine with blue sky in the background.
Teens walking on a forest path.
Top Story
global plastic production cuts
Credit: Mark Dixon/Flickr

US shifts to support global plastic production cuts

In a significant policy shift, the United States is now backing a global treaty to reduce plastic production, putting it at odds with major plastic producers like Saudi Arabia and China.

Valerie Volcovici reports for Reuters.

In short:

  • According to a source close to negotiators, the U.S. will support a global treaty to reduce the production of new plastic, a change from its previous stance.
  • This move aligns the U.S. with countries like the EU and Canada, which advocate for caps on plastic production and eliminating harmful chemicals.
  • The U.S. will also support creation of a list of harmful chemicals for phaseout.
  • The policy shift comes just before crucial treaty negotiations in South Korea and has received mixed reactions from industry and environmental groups.

Key quote:

"This significant change of heart by the U.S. State Department — to support a global target that will reduce plastic production and to identify a list of hazardous chemicals to be eliminated from plastics — is affirmation of hard work by an assemblage of organizations working to ensure the treaty negotiations fully incorporated concerns about the human health effects chemicals in plastics. It was already clear that the current level of plastic production was unsustainable, and that current 'business as usual' projections by industry were going to make things much worse. If the State Department sticks to this commitment, we will all benefit."

— Pete Myers, EHS founder and chief scientist

Why this matters:

By backing the treaty, the U.S. is acknowledging that our addiction to plastics is not just an eyesore but a real threat to our health and the environment.

Read more from EHN about the impacts of plastic on our health:

A plastic recipe for societal suicide

Every stage of plastic production and use is harming human health: Report

Keep reading...Show less
Virginia governor rolls back plastics phase-out

Virginia governor rolls back plastics phase-out

Gov. Glenn Youngkin trumpeted efforts to boost recycling, but also eliminated a commitment by his predecessor to phase out single-use plastics.
backroom battle over plastics regulation
www.nationalobserver.com

The backroom battle between industry, Ottawa and environmentalists over plastics regulation

Canada's $28-billion plastics industry has always resisted efforts to curtail production. But with the federal government proposing a ban on certain single-use items and looking to classify plastic as toxic, the pushback has grown even greater.
2020 Goldman Environmental Prize winners

Meet the 2020 Goldman Environmental Prize winners

This year marks the 31st anniversary of the prestigious Goldman Environmental Prize, which honors one grassroot activist from each of the six inhabited continents.

Canada's environmental agenda delayed
www.cbc.ca

Canada's new climate targets, plastics ban likely to be delayed due to pandemic

Canada's national environment agenda is the latest thing to be upended by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Shambala: The festival that banned cow’s milk, meat and glitter
www.bbc.com

Shambala: The festival that banned cow’s milk, meat and glitter

Shambala Festival has reduced their carbon footprint by over 80% and eradicated disposable plastics.

We need to talk about virgin plastics
www.dw.com

We need to talk about virgin plastics

As the EU waves through the single-use plastics ban, broadly shuns fracking and pushes for decarbonization by 2050, plans for a wholesale contradiction involving INEOS and US ethane are underway in the city of Antwerp.
ORIGINAL REPORTING
MOST POPULAR
CLIMATE