Americans May Add Five Times More Plastic to the Oceans Than Thought
 
The United States is using more
plastic than ever, and waste exported for
recycling is often mishandled, according
to a new study.
The United States contribution
to coastal plastic pollution worldwide is
significantly larger than previously
thought, possibly by as much as five
times, according to a study published
Friday. The research, published in Science
Advances, is the sequel to a 2015 paper
by the same authors. Two factors
contributed to the sharp increase:
Americans are using more plastic than
ever and the current study included
pollution generated by United States
exports of plastic waste, while the earlier
one did not.
The United States, which does
not have sufficient infrastructure to
handle its recycling demands at home,
exports about half of its recyclable waste.
Of the total exported, about 88 percent
ends up in countries considered to have
inadequate waste management.
“When you consider how much
of our plastic waste isn’t actually
recyclable because it is low-value,
contaminated or difficult to process, it’s
not surprising that a lot of it ends up
polluting the environment,” said the
study’s lead author, Kara Lavender Law,
research professor of oceanography at
Sea Education Association, in a
statement.
The study estimates that in
2016, the United States contributed
between 1.1 and 2.2 million metric tons of
plastic waste to the oceans through a
combination of littering, dumping and
 mismanaged exports. At a minimum,
 that’s almost double the total estimated
 waste in the team’s previous study. At the
 high end, it would be a fivefold increase
 over the earlier estimate.
 Nicholas Mallos, a senior
 director at the Ocean Conservancy and an
 author of the study, said the upper
 estimate would be equal to a pile of
 plastic covering the area of the White
 House Lawn and reaching as high as the
 Empire State Building.
 The ranges are wide partly
 because “there’s no real standard for
 being able to provide good quality data on
 collection and disposal of waste in
 general,” said Ted Siegler, a resource
 economist at DSM Environmental
 Solutions, a consulting firm, and an
 author of the study. Mr. Siegler said the
 researchers had evaluated waste-disposal
 practices in countries around the world
 and used their “best professional
 judgment” to determine the lowest and
 highest amounts of plastic waste likely to
 escape into the environment. They settled
 on a range of 25 percent to 75 percent.
 Tony Walker, an associate
 professor at the Dalhousie University
 School for Resource and Environmental
 Studies in Halifax, Nova Scotia, said that
 analyzing waste data can amount to a
 “data minefield” because there are no
 data standards across municipalities.
 Moreover, once plastic waste is shipped
 overseas, he said, data is often not
 recorded at all.
 Nonetheless, Dr. Walker, who
 was not involved in the study, said it
 could offer a more accurate accounting of
 plastic pollution than the previous study,
 which likely underestimated the United
 States’ contribution. “They’ve put their
 best estimate, as accurate as they can be
 with this data,” he said, and used ranges,
 which underscores that the figures are
 estimates.
 Of the plastics that go into the
 United States recycling system, about 9
 percent of the country’s total plastic
 waste, there is no guarantee that they’ll
 be remade into new consumer goods. New
 plastic is so inexpensive to manufacture
 that only certain expensive, high-grade
 plastics are profitable to recycle within the
 United States, which is why roughly half
 of the country’s plastic waste was shipped
 abroad in 2016, the most recent year for
 which data is available.
 Since 2016, however, the
 recycling landscape has changed. China
 and many countries in Southeast Asia
 have stopped accepting plastic waste
 imports. And lower oil prices have further
 reduced the market for recycled plastic.
 “What the new study really underscores is
 we have to get a handle on source
 reduction at home,” Mr. Mallos said. “That
 starts with eliminating unnecessary and
 problematic single-use plastics.”
 
 From: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/30/