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Page added on June 8, 2020

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From environmental villain to pandemic hero — plastic is back

From environmental villain to pandemic hero — plastic is back thumbnail

During the height of the Flint water crisis, CNN introduced us to Gina Luster, her 7-year-old daughter, and 13-year-old niece. The network’s in-depth profile described the family’s physical devastation from the city’s lead-contaminated water and their daily lifeline: bottled water.

By CNN’s count, this family of three depended on 151 bottles of water a day to meet their most basic needs — drinking, cooking, bathing and hygiene — 16.9 ounces at a time.

Multiply by 1,600 days and 30,000 homes, and roughly seven billion bottles of water helped 100,000 affected residents make it through the bulk of the crisis.

Today, bottled water has resurfaced as a lifeline for Flint residents now caught in the coronavirus pandemic and still can’t count on their tap water for drink, much less hand-washing.

Bottled water was also the government’s go-to when high lead levels recently showed up in Newark, New Jersey’s water. The same is true for victims of hurricanes, earthquakes, floods, forest fires — and the emergency responders — when Mother Nature wreaks havoc on municipal water supplies.

The uncomfortable truth to environmental groups however, is that these billions of life-saving bottles of water are made of plastic.

While unfortunate for the so-called zero-waste movement which aims to eliminate the use of single-use plastics and their role in pollution, such crises repeatedly underscore the important role plastics play in emergencies.

A recent national poll found bottled water is one of the most important items to have on hand when it comes to disaster preparedness. 70 percent of families said bottled water is among the top three most important items — second only to canned food at 71%. (And nearly double the preference, by the way, of toilet paper.)

The coronavirus pandemic has been no exception, as 61% of families bought bottled water when self-quarantining started in their states — a number that jumped to 75% among 18-34-year olds.

The pandemic has also brought back demand for another oft-vilified single-use plastic: grocery bags.

Eight states and numerous cities have banned plastic bags altogether, or tacked on fees or taxes as a way to encourage the use of reusable shopping bags.

Worry that reusable bags could carry the coronavirus between homes and grocery stores, however, has led several states to either suspend their plastic bag bans, impose new bans on reusable bags, lift plastic bag fees, and in the District of Columbia, suspend enforcement of its five-cent-per-plastic bag tax.

We’re also seeing a pandemic-driven resurgence in single-use plastics for fresh food packaging for longer shelf life at stores and in homes.

The pandemic is stoking particular concern throughout Europe where a sweeping single-use plastics ban is set to take effect next summer. According to Politico, “In supermarkets across the Continent, buns, apples and avocados are smothered in plastic wrap — and people worried about catching a deadly disease don’t care.”

It’s likely that the least-contested sector for single-use plastic products is in health care—especially during a pandemic. Gloves, masks and face shields, catheters, medicine bags, IV tubes syringes, and other medical equipment are critical to medical providers and patients.

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has even deemed workers who produce single-use plastics for packaging as “essential critical infrastructure” during the COVID-19 response for their part in preventing the contamination or supporting the “continued manufacture of food, water, medicine, and other essential products.”

We’ll not know how long single-use plastic’s return to prominence will last until the pandemic finally wanes. Its opponents have sounded the alarm of surging plastic waste amid halted municipal recycling services and stridently criticized what they consider industry-driven efforts to upend legislative progress to eliminate single-use plastics altogether.

One thing is clear, however. While the important work must continue toward restoring and preserving our oceans and environment, we must also recognize that something as socially and politically disfavored as single-use plastics may be key to surviving COVID-19 and future disasters.

 

Detroit News



5 Comments on "From environmental villain to pandemic hero — plastic is back"

  1. DT on Mon, 8th Jun 2020 2:52 pm 

    “The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has even deemed workers who produce single-use plastics for packaging as “essential critical infrastructure” So much for caring about what is being dumped into the environment.

  2. SocialRevolutionComing on Mon, 8th Jun 2020 3:11 pm 

    It is because they are afraid of a total supply chain collapse now. The fucking globalists and rich elites started a the deathly COVID hoax without a precise analysis is the supply chain and link between the supply and components. You need a minimal load on the supply chain to keep it functioning world wide. A PC manufacturer cannot produce one PC a day. There is a minimal amount of productions that is needed the keep the supply chain and manufacturing plants alive.

    Fucking globalists like Klaus Schwab of the World Economical Forum and Chrystian Freeland and others need to be public executed for crime against humanity.

    Now because of the lack of demand oil shuppy chain is shutting. I am trying to buy a laptop. They are back ordered. All the models I want I back ordered except one. Look at the link below.

    https://www.pc-canada.com/p/go/go.asp?OBY=2&CATID=10041&ATTID=331100%2C54&PriceFilter=2&OPTID=12492%2C450069

    These fucking globalists that wanted to imposed on us their liberal world order have not damage some parts of the supply chain.

    Klaus Schwab

  3. makati1 on Mon, 8th Jun 2020 5:30 pm 

    People, it is ALL about $$$. No one gives a shit about the environment that they are destroying, one day at a time. That is, until it gets to the killing point where their lives are at stake. Not there yet, but getting closer.

    I grew up when plastic was expensive and still not used for much. Paper bags were used instead. You bought fresh meat wrapped in ‘butcher’s paper’ not plastic. Canned goods were all metal and dry stuff was in cardboard boxes. Cars were steel and aluminum, not plastic. Etc.

    Then the oily companies needed new ways to sell their black poison so plastics were pushed, the hell with the consequences. Now it is everywhere and most will still be here in some form in 10,000 years, but we won’t be.

    Ah well. It is ALL about $$$.

  4. Anonymouse on Mon, 8th Jun 2020 6:46 pm 

    Yes, In my province, those morons decreed you can NOT use your re-usable bags anymore. Somehow, those also constitute some kind of public heath risk. Why? Dont know. No one else does either. Even the people that dreamed it up. IoW, i cant bring groceries home in my backpack. I have to let the morons load me up with plastic, which I then take outside. Xfer to my backpack, and dump the plastic in trash. Im a law-breaker you see. Re-usbale bags are a deadly threat….

    So many indignities, large and small all due to this covid hoax. Brutish looking thugs at the grocery store stand outside and make you feel like a criminal for getting some milk and bread. When they are not forcing you to stand in line in the rain outside while you wait ‘your turn’inside that is. And then there is those stupid lines on the floor everywhere. Directing you like a lab rat.

  5. makati1 on Mon, 8th Jun 2020 7:12 pm 

    Anon, the insane are running the world now. The only sane people, like you and I, are just riding out the collapse into…? Well, at this point I would not want to guess, but it will not be pretty. I see the West going down to 3rd world levels by 2030. I watch from far shores in the cheap seats. Quite a show!

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