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CIRCLE WITH A DOT

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  3. Plastic recycling isn’t a solution.

Plastic recycling isn’t a solution.

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environmentalhaenvironmentplasticpollutiocirculareconomysustainability
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  • resplendent606@climatejustice.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
    resplendent606@climatejustice.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
    resplendent606@climatejustice.social
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    Plastic recycling isn’t a solution. It is a marketing campaign designed to shift the burden of waste from the manufacturer to the consumer.

    Most plastic is "downcycled" once, then heads straight to the landfill or the ocean. The only real way to keep plastic out of the environment is to stop producing it.

    #EnvironmentalHardTruths #Environment #PlasticPollution #CircularEconomy #Sustainability

    dianea@lgbtqia.spaceD delilahtech@tech.lgbtD 2 Replies Last reply
    0
    • resplendent606@climatejustice.socialR resplendent606@climatejustice.social

      Plastic recycling isn’t a solution. It is a marketing campaign designed to shift the burden of waste from the manufacturer to the consumer.

      Most plastic is "downcycled" once, then heads straight to the landfill or the ocean. The only real way to keep plastic out of the environment is to stop producing it.

      #EnvironmentalHardTruths #Environment #PlasticPollution #CircularEconomy #Sustainability

      dianea@lgbtqia.spaceD This user is from outside of this forum
      dianea@lgbtqia.spaceD This user is from outside of this forum
      dianea@lgbtqia.space
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      @resplendent606

      Can confirm, as someone who worked half my career in plastics production, this is fact. We could only reuse plastic in our supply chain if it was free of any contamination or it would clog up the extruder breaker plates or damage the crazy expensive machined extruder itself. And the longer the polymer is in that heat cycle, the stringier it gets until it turns goey blob, making it totally unusable. Edit: cured plastics do not have the option of remelting and can only be burned or buried.

      The most we could recycle if it was 99.999% free of contaminants was about 15% regrind and that was significantly lowering the physical qualities like strength and other QA requirements.

      Ask any janitor where that plastic recycling bin goes, "same place as the rest, out back in the dumpster."

      resplendent606@climatejustice.socialR 1 Reply Last reply
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      • resplendent606@climatejustice.socialR resplendent606@climatejustice.social

        Plastic recycling isn’t a solution. It is a marketing campaign designed to shift the burden of waste from the manufacturer to the consumer.

        Most plastic is "downcycled" once, then heads straight to the landfill or the ocean. The only real way to keep plastic out of the environment is to stop producing it.

        #EnvironmentalHardTruths #Environment #PlasticPollution #CircularEconomy #Sustainability

        delilahtech@tech.lgbtD This user is from outside of this forum
        delilahtech@tech.lgbtD This user is from outside of this forum
        delilahtech@tech.lgbt
        wrote last edited by
        #3

        @resplendent606
        Speaking of which, the media are all about the fuel and fertilizer shortages because of Hormuz, but the cost of plastics is also going to rise because—surprise!—plastics are made from petroleum, too

        resplendent606@climatejustice.socialR 1 Reply Last reply
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        • delilahtech@tech.lgbtD delilahtech@tech.lgbt

          @resplendent606
          Speaking of which, the media are all about the fuel and fertilizer shortages because of Hormuz, but the cost of plastics is also going to rise because—surprise!—plastics are made from petroleum, too

          resplendent606@climatejustice.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
          resplendent606@climatejustice.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
          resplendent606@climatejustice.social
          wrote last edited by
          #4

          @DelilahTech

          It’s even wilder when you look at the feedstocks. Ethane, the byproduct that makes most plastic, is essentially a waste resource of gas and oil extraction.

          We often have so much of it that it’s just flared (burned) off at the wellhead because there’s nowhere to put it. The industry has spent decades building "cracker plants" just to find a way to monetize this byproduct by turning it into single use plastic.

          Theoretically, we have enough of the trash gas to keep making plastic for a long time, regardless of oil shortages. The high prices are often more about the energy cost of the manufacturing plants than a lack of raw material.

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          • dianea@lgbtqia.spaceD dianea@lgbtqia.space

            @resplendent606

            Can confirm, as someone who worked half my career in plastics production, this is fact. We could only reuse plastic in our supply chain if it was free of any contamination or it would clog up the extruder breaker plates or damage the crazy expensive machined extruder itself. And the longer the polymer is in that heat cycle, the stringier it gets until it turns goey blob, making it totally unusable. Edit: cured plastics do not have the option of remelting and can only be burned or buried.

            The most we could recycle if it was 99.999% free of contaminants was about 15% regrind and that was significantly lowering the physical qualities like strength and other QA requirements.

            Ask any janitor where that plastic recycling bin goes, "same place as the rest, out back in the dumpster."

            resplendent606@climatejustice.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
            resplendent606@climatejustice.socialR This user is from outside of this forum
            resplendent606@climatejustice.social
            wrote last edited by
            #5

            @dianea

            So true.

            This is the reality people don't want to hear. Even in perfect industrial conditions, you’re only getting a 15% mix before the quality falls off a cliff.

            We aren't "recycling" plastic into new bottles. We are slowly downcycling it into a gooey, unusable blob until it eventually ends up in the dumpster anyway. It’s a delay tactic, not a solution.

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