The ubiquity of plastic in modern life makes recycling seem like a moral imperative. From straws and bags to take-out containers, single-use plastics crowd landfills and clog waterways. And the crisis is accelerating. Legal scholar Roberta Mann warns that by 2050, plastic in the ocean could outweigh fish. The United States led the world in plastic waste in 2016, Mann writes, generating over 42 million metric tons. The COVID-19 pandemic further fueled plastics consumption, with a spike in single-use personal protective equipment and packaging from online shopping. But here's the catch: research suggests that our dependence on recycling as a solution isn't only ineffective -- it's based on a carefully crafted illusion. The narrative that recycling can meaningfully counteract the plastic crisis was constructed by the oil and gas industry to maintain public demand for plastic and delay regulation of its production.
Read the full report here: climateintegrity.org/projects/adv ...
-- Davis Allen (@davisallen.bsky.social) May 8, 2025 at 12:59 PM
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NPR did a good piece on this last year. Reduce, reuse, redirect outrage: How plastic makers used recycling as a fig leaf
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