– Investigating the link between the petrochemical industry and plastic pollution
The California attorney general wants to establish the responsibilities of the petrochemical industry in plastic pollution.
California announced on Thursday the opening of a wide-ranging investigation aimed at establishing the responsibilities of the petrochemical industry in plastic pollution, mainly made from hydrocarbons and which threatens health and biodiversity in the world. entire.
“That’s enough. For more than half a century, the plastics industry has aggressively campaigned to deceive the public, perpetuating the myth that recycling might solve the plastic crisis. The truth is this: the overwhelming majority of plastic cannot be recycled, and the recycling rate has never exceeded 9%” in the United States, charged Rob Bonta, attorney general of California.
The rest is buried in landfills, incinerated or released into the environment. “Each week, we consume a volume of plastic equivalent to a credit card through the water we drink, the food we eat and the air we breathe”, says Rob Bonta.
ExxonMobil assigned
The investigation launched Thursday will examine “past and present efforts made by the petrochemical industry” to deceive the public and determine how “these actions may have contravened the law”, explain the services of the Attorney General in a press release.
The first act of this unprecedented initiative in the United States, the Californian authorities have assigned the American oil giant ExxonMobil, “major source of plastic pollution”, to ask it for “information relating to its role” on this subject.
“In California and around the world, we are seeing the catastrophic consequences of this decades-long campaign of deceit by the fossil fuel industry. Plastic pollution is seeping into our waterways, poisoning our environment and rotting our landscapes,” continues Rob Bonta in the press release.
Plastic micro-particles
Some 460 million tonnes of plastics were produced in 2019 worldwide, generating 353 million tonnes of waste, of which less than 10% is currently recycled, according to the OECD. This waste degrades into plastic micro-particles that are found in all the oceans of the globe, in the pack ice, in the stomachs of animals and even in the air taken from the tops of mountains.
According to the OECD, plastic products also represent nearly 3.5% of greenhouse gas emissions contributing to global warming. For Jennifer Savage, head of the fight once morest plastic pollution at the Surfrider Foundation, the investigation launched by California might help “establish the responsibility of fossil fuel producers in one of the greatest environmental crises of our time. .”
“Most people don’t realize how intertwined plastic production is with the hydrocarbon industry,” she told the Los Angeles Times. Last month, the UN kicked off negotiations in Kenya to come up with a global treaty once morest plastic pollution.
AFP
Published today at 00:40
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