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January 14, 2025 Toxic Exposures Views

Toxic Exposures

57 Million Tons of Plastic Pollution Created Every Year — Is There a Solution?

“The Conversation Weekly” podcast sat down with Mark Miodowonik, professor of materials and society at University College London, to understand the history of plastic, how it’s shaped our lives, and what can be done to make sure more plastic is recycled and less ends up polluting the planet.

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By Gemma Ware

Every year, 400 million tons of plastic are produced worldwide, and every year, approximately 57 million tons of plastic pollution is created.

And yet in November 2024, the latest round of negotiations on the first legally binding international treaty on plastics pollution ended without an agreement.

Oil-producing countries, including Saudi Arabia, Iran, Kuwait and Russia, refused to sign up to a clause calling for the world to reduce its production of plastics.

As clean energy technologies like electric vehicles gain traction worldwide, these economies are counting on continued and even increased plastic production to buffer them from the economic blow of reduced demand for oil.

So what can we really do about the plastics pollution problem? “The Conversation Weekly” podcast sat down with Mark Miodowonik, professor of materials and society at University College London (UCL) in the United Kingdom (U.K.), to understand the history of plastic, how it’s shaped our lives and what can be done to make sure more plastic is recycled and less ends up polluting the planet.

In 1907 a chemist called Leo Bakerland invented a new type of rigid, synthetic plastic. He called it bakelite, and it was quickly seized upon by the modernism movement.

“You can start mass producing items in a particular shape and they’re all the same,” explains Miodowonik, who leads the Plastic Waste Innovation Hub at UCL. First telephones, and then radios are manufactured using bakelite.

“It’s a huge revolution in the way people think about themselves, how they communicate with the world, who they are … plastic becomes the material of this new era and everyone goes to town with it.”

Because plastic is a big business, the price comes down and it goes from a somewhat luxurious item to an everyday one. Suddenly everything is made of different types of plastic, including disposable packaging for fast food that people are encouraged to throw away.

By the 1970s, scientists working in plastic manufacturing companies were sounding alarms about all the plastic making its way to landfills and how long it took to degrade.

But little action was taken, says Miodowonik.

“You can see that the companies obviously don’t want to deal with it. It’s going to cost them money. And us people who are buying this stuff, we went along with it, right? We luxuriated in it. We weren’t too bothered either.”

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Making polluters pay

As a result of environmental activists raising the alarm in the 1980s and 1990s, governments and companies slowly started to at least pay lip service to plastic recycling.

And these days, there has been a shift in our attitudes toward plastics as people are starting to realize the scale of plastic pollution.

Few plastic manufacturers have faced consequences for their inaction, though these days, there seems to be more of a collective will to take action against them.

In September 2024, the U.S. federal government successfully sued Keurig, the company that makes those little plastic pods that produce one cup of coffee or tea, for claiming that those pods are recyclable when they’re not. Keurig paid $1.5 million (1.2 million pounds) in penalties.

The state of California in the U.S. has also brought a similar lawsuit against Exxon Mobil alleging that it knowingly made fraudulent claims about the recyclability of its plastic products.

Midowonik doesn’t lay the blame solely at the feet of companies like these. He says the inaction of plastic manufacturers to reduce plastic waste is a reflection of our own consumerist society and our desire for cheap stuff. He believes there needs to be a more concerted effort to make polluters pay.

“I think we need to change the laws so that if you make something, you’re responsible for its end of life. You should not be able to sell any product into a market where there’s not a waste processing system in place which can deal with that material.”

Listen to “The Conversation Weekly” podcast to hear the full conversation with Miodowonik.

Originally published by The Conversation

This episode of “The Conversation Weekly” was produced by Gemma Ware and Katie Flood. The sound design was by Michelle Macklem and the theme music was by Neeta Sarl. Newsclips in this episode were from NHK World Japan, Today and CBS News.

Gemma Ware is based at The Conversation in London where she is the co-producer and editor of “The Conversation Weekly” podcast and is head of audio for The Conversation U.K. She previously worked on the international politics, society and education desks of The Conversation.

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