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Study: Cleanup, management won't save ecosystems from plastic pollution
by Brooks Hays
Washington DC (UPI) Sep 17, 2020

Germany to ban plastic straws by mid-2021
Berlin (AFP) Sept 17, 2020 - German lawmakers approved legislation Thursday banning disposable plastic products such as straws, cutlery and cotton buds that are polluting the world's oceans.

The new law passed by Germany's lower house of parliament will halt the sale of certain single-use plastics by July 2021.

The move brings Germany in line with its European commitments after the EU last year agreed to place tough new restrictions on certain plastic items.

The EU legislation bans around a dozen disposable plastic products for which environmentally friendly alternatives exist, including drink stirrers, chopsticks and plates.

According to the EU Commission, the products prohibited under the law represent 70 percent of the waste that pours into oceans, posing a threat to wildlife and fisheries.

The EU-wide legislation has already prompted fast food giant McDonald's to speed up its move to limit the use of plastics in its European restaurants, including by ditching the plastic lids on McFlurry ice creams.

McDonald's estimates that the change will save more than 1,200 tonnes of plastic a year on the continent.

Environmental group Greenpeace on Thursday criticised the new legislation however for only covering a specific list of single-use plastics instead of a wholesale ban on all such products.

"The way out the plastics crisis can only happen through a real change in packaging away from the disposable to the reusable," said Viola Wohlgemuth of Greenpeace Germany.

Even if countries fund massive cleanup efforts and dramatically improve waste management infrastructure, two studies published Thursday in the journal Science suggest it won't be enough to save Earth's ecosystems from plastic pollution.

"We simply make too much plastic waste to handle with current waste management infrastructure, and eventually we are going to run out of land to put landfills," ecologist Stephanie Borrelle, research fellow at the University of Toronto, told UPI in an email.

Plastic pollution is a growing problem for the planet's many ecosystems. From the island reefs and deep sea valleys to polar glaciers and the world's tallest peaks, pieces of plastic, big and small, are showing up everywhere.

And it's not just ecosystems. Scientists have recovered micro plastics from the intestines of dozens of animals species. Tiny bits of plastic are even showing up in human organs.

Because water works to collect, carry and concentrate plastic pollution, freshwater and marine ecosystems are most at risk.

To better understand the scope of the problem and how humans might combat it, scientists combined country level waste generation and population growth data -- while also considering changes in plastic usage patterns -- to estimate global plastic waste generation through 2030.

"To estimate the amount that enters rivers, lakes and the oceans, we made a model that predicts the proportion of plastic waste that is not managed ... that will likely make its way into major waterways," said Borrelle, lead author on one of the new studies.

"The data we used for this was high resolution downhill flow accumulation data called Hydrosheds," Borrelle said. "The basic premise is that if a piece of plastic is littered next to a river, there is a high probability that it will end up in that river, but as you move further away that probability rapidly decreases."

Next, researchers looked at the commitments made by different countries toward different plastic pollution solutions, including waste reduction, waste management and clean up.

The analysis showed even robust efforts to reduce, manage and cleanup waste won't offset the continue production of virgin plastic. As a result, Borrelle and her colleagues warn ecosystems will continue to experience increases in plastic pollution.

"We are already seeing the wide-scale contamination of all ecosystems with plastic, from thee deep oceans, to the poles, high on mountains and in wildlife, there are emerging toxicological impacts, not just for wildlife affected by it, but people too," Borrelle said. "Plastic takes a long time to break down, so it will just keep piling up and breaking apart into microplastics."

The findings aren't an excuse to surrender the Earth to an onslaught of plastic. Instead, researchers hope their findings will inspire nations to commit to producing less plastic, in addition to funding cleanup efforts and enhancing waste management infrastructure.

According to researchers, policy makers must act swiftly to prevent plastic-making companies from passing the costs of pollution environmental degradation onto governments and consumers.

"The plastics economy needs to be turned upside down," Borrelle said. "Currently, producers of plastics -- the petrochemical sector of the oil and gas industry -- are subsidized to make virgin plastics, and are heavily investing in infrastructure to expand this capacity. This has lead to virgin plastic materials being cheaper to produce than recycled materials."

Ending fossil fuel subsidies and instituting cap and trade policies for plastic production could both help reduce the production of virgin plastic to manageable levels.

"We are going to have to also improve waste management and unfortunately for as long as we use plastics, some will enter the environment, so clean up has to be a part of any strategy," Borrelle said.


Related Links
Our Polluted World and Cleaning It Up


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FROTH AND BUBBLE
Brown Danube: How Belgrade's sewers taint Europe's famous river
Belgrade (AFP) Sept 16, 2020
Just down the road from Belgrade's historic city centre, gates open for trucks to pass to the banks of the Danube, where they dump raw sewage into Europe's venerated river. It's not a secret operation, but rather a business nobody likes to mention in the Serbian capital - the only one in Europe to spew all of its unfiltered wastewater into the continent's second-longest river. A heavy odour rises as the brown stream of faeces flows into the waterway, a far cry from the colours that inspired Jo ... read more

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