Underdone Comics
Artist: Rob Lang
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Underdone Comics
Artist: Rob Lang
Data shows that American exporters continue to ship plastic waste overseas, often to poorer countries, even though most of the world has agreed to not accept it.
Excerpt from this New York Times story:
When more than 180 nations agreed last year to place strict limits on exports of plastic waste from richer countries to poorer ones, the move was seen as a major victory in the fight against plastic pollution.
But new trade data for January, the first month that the agreement took effect, shows that American exports of plastic scrap to poorer countries have barely changed, and overall scrap plastics exports rose, which environmental watchdog groups say is evidence that exporters are ignoring the new rules.
The American companies seem to be relying on a remarkable interpretation of the new rules: Even though it’s now illegal for most countries to accept all but the purest forms of plastic scrap from the United States, there’s nothing that prevents the United States from sending the waste. The main reason: the United States is one of the few countries in the world that didn’t ratify the global ban.
“This is our first hard evidence that nobody seems to be paying attention to the international law,” said Jim Puckett, executive director of the Basel Action Network, a nonprofit group that lobbies against the plastic waste trade. “As soon as the shipments get on the high seas, it’s considered illegal trafficking. And the rest of the world has to deal with it.”
The scrap industry says that many of the exports are quite likely compliant with the new rules and that the increase in January reflects growing global demand for plastic to recycle, and use as inputs for new products. Recent history, however, shows that a large of amount plastic scrap exported from the United States does not get recycled but ends up as waste, a reality that was the impetus for the new rules.
The new rules were adopted in 2019 by most of the world’s countries, although the United States isn’t among them, under a framework known as the Basel Convention. Underlying the change was the need to stem the flow of waste from America, and other wealthier nations, to poorer ones.
What the heck World!!
“ An example of plastic garbage in a Philippines river that eventually reaches the oceans “ ... “ Rivers carry an estimated 1.15-2.41 million tonnes of plastic into the sea every year, an amount that need between 48,000 to over 100,000 dump trucks to carry it away. “ Quote from the linked article. These numbers are astounding and horrible. Are the governments of China, India and the rest of Asia doing enough with awareness campaigns to stem the flow of plastic garbage in their respective countries ? Probably Not !!! ... Read the article and weep:
http://www.msn.com/en-us/weather/topstories/plastic-in-rivers-major-source-of-ocean-pollution-study/ar-BBCjGkf
This is the thing I got btw.
Patchy garbage collection services result in more than 50 million tonnes of unmanaged plastic waste each year, and the majority of this is incinerated
Plastics Found in Every Human Placenta
The findings raise concerns about risks to fetal development, as studies emerge linking nanoplastics to heart disease and death.
WHY WE NEED A PYROLYSIS PLASTIC/TIRE FACILITY IN EVERY CITY....
Sorting centres across New Brunswick are stockpiling hundreds of tons of plastic bags, as employees scratch their heads to figure out what to do with the material few recycling companies are willing to buy anymore.
"We don't want to landfill it just yet," said Marc-André Chiasson, communications officer with Moncton's Eco 360, the company that manages landfill for Southeast New Brunswick.