Plastic Is Creating an Environmental Justice Crisis [View all]
Theres growing awareness that plastics are an environmental disaster for marine and terrestrial ecosystems alike. A new United Nations report published Tuesday shows theyre also a huge problem for human beingsand that they dont affect us all equally.
The world is producing more plastic than ever before as oil and gas firms focus on expanding plastic production in an attempt to stay in business. If the upward trend continues, plastic will account for 20% of the worlds oil consumption by 2050.
According to the new analysis, the world produced more than 9 billion tons of new plastic from 1950 to 2015. Even more shockingly, more than 50% of all plastic in history was created in the last 18 years. At this rate of growth, the world is on track produce 38 tons of plastic by 2025, which is enough to cover every foot of coastline on Earth with a layer of 100 plastic bags. Yet plastic production and pollution remain out of sight and out of mind in high-income communities, with the worst impacts foisted on people already suffering.
The study, released by the United Nations Environment Program and the environmental justice nonprofit Azul, shows that problems with plastic start long before its thrown away. Every aspect of plastics life cyclefrom the extraction of raw materials and production to distribution and disposalare threatening human health. At every stage, the report also explains, economically and socially disadvantaged groups, including women, children, the poor, migrants and internally displaced people, indigenous peoples, and persons with disabilities, are the most negatively affected.
Plastic pollution is a social justice issue,Marce Gutiérrez-Graudiņ, executive director of Azul and co-author of the study, said in a statement. Current efforts, limited to managing and decreasing plastic pollution, are inadequate to address the whole scope of problems plastic creates, especially the disparate impacts on communities affected by the harmful effects of plastic at every point from production to waste.
Ninety-nine percent of plastic is made from oil and gas. Even before drilling starts, this is often an environmental justice problem, the report notes. Many oil and gas projects are approved to operation on Indigenous land from North America to Ecuador to Sudan despite a lack of consente. And when extraction begins, mountains of research shows that poor communities, often of color, are most likely to be affected by the local air pollution, as well as by the climate crisis which it perpetuates.
Read more: https://earther.gizmodo.com/plastic-is-creating-an-environmental-justice-crisis-1846584041