New California Bill Could Revolutionize How the U.S.
Tackles Plastic Pollution
By Tara
Lohan
Banned in Europe, starting 2021 |
Mounting global
pressure to curb plastic pollution is gaining steam. A significant leap came
last year with the European Union’s vote to
ban single-use plastic items by 2021 and boost bottle recycling 90 percent by
2025. On June 10 Canada announced it
would follow Europe’s lead.
In the United States,
efforts to reduce plastic waste have so far been piecemeal — bans on specific
items, like plastic bags, and only in certain municipalities. But California
could help the country take a massive leap forward.
At the end of May, the
California Senate passed S.B. 54, the California Circular Economy and
Plastic Pollution Reduction Act, introduced by Senator Ben Allen and
modeled after the European effort. A day later, the state’s assembly passed
identical legislation, A.B. 1080, introduced by Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez.
If the bills clear opposite houses and earn the governor’s signature, it will
be groundbreaking.
“We haven’t seen anything like this elsewhere in the U.S.,” says Angela Howe, legal director of Surfrider, a nonprofit devoted to clean oceans and beaches, which is part of a coalition of organizations working in support of the legislation and reducing plastic pollution.
The focus of the
legislation is on producer responsibility — both reducing the amount of waste
generated and making sure what is absolutely necessary is either compostable or
recyclable.
On average only 9 percent of plastics are recycled in the United States, and that already-modest number is expected to decrease even further as more countries follow China’s leadin closing their doors to waste exports from the United States and elsewhere.
On average only 9 percent of plastics are recycled in the United States, and that already-modest number is expected to decrease even further as more countries follow China’s leadin closing their doors to waste exports from the United States and elsewhere.
Plastic isn’t just
washing up on beaches, it’s piling up at landfills, making the crisis in the
country even more urgent and expensive.
As written now the
legislation would require manufacturers and retailers in California to reduce
the waste generated by single-use packaging and products by 75 percent by 2030
through producing less plastic, recycling more of it, making reusable
packaging, or using compostable materials.
It would also set guidelines for manufacturers of single-use plastic packaging and products that would ensure that 20 percent of their products are recycled by 2024, 40 percent by 2028, and 75 percent by 2030.
It would also set guidelines for manufacturers of single-use plastic packaging and products that would ensure that 20 percent of their products are recycled by 2024, 40 percent by 2028, and 75 percent by 2030.
“The single-use
plastic crisis is so pervasive that we’re seeing microplastics in the tiniest
plankton to the largest whales,” says Ashley Blacow-Draeger, Pacific policy and
communications manager at Oceana, which is helping to support the
legislation.
“It just drives home the message that we can’t recycle our way out of this crisis. We need really strong, bold and timely action now and we don’t have any more time to wait to address the issue.”
“It just drives home the message that we can’t recycle our way out of this crisis. We need really strong, bold and timely action now and we don’t have any more time to wait to address the issue.”
Previous efforts to
tackle banning or restricting items like foam food containers, plastic bags and
plastic straws has been tantamount to winning battles but not winning the war,
says Stiv Wilson, director of campaigns for the Story
of Stuff, which is producing a film about the global fight against
plastic pollution and is a leading coalition partner supporting the
legislation.
“If we’re going to fix
the system, we have to actually take a systemic approach,” he says.
He admits that
regulating the materials economy isn’t as easy as a simple message like banning
bags, but it’s the only effective way to tackle the problem.
One of the biggest
issues is that there’s simply too much plastic, which is why the bill has an
emphasis on source reduction, he says.
“We have to get to a
manageable supply to be able to create a reasonable demand,” says Wilson. “Once
that lever gets pulled where there is a statutory obligation on a supply chain,
all of a sudden you will see investment in that supply chain to meet that
demand.”
And that, advocates of
the legislation say, should spur investment domestic recycling, build green
jobs, and enable companies to develop alternative delivery systems for products
meant to create reusability instead of disposability.
The potential benefits
would be far-reaching — aiding not just oceans, but wildlife and human health,
as well as economies, says Blacow-Draeger.
“It’s shocking how
expensive it is for cities and counties to remediate all the single-use
plastics waste that is being produced,” she says. “The hope with these pieces of
legislation is that they will actually lessen the burden on municipalities and
on ratepayers by not producing as much waste to have to process in the future.”
For many industries it
would also be a big change.
“It wouldn’t just be
the one major plastic bag manufacturer that’s affected,” says Howe. “It’s
everything from grocery stores to the natural gas plants that make plastics to
retailers and manufacturers.”
Proponents of the
legislation say they anticipate pushback from these industries as the bills go
through committee in the opposite houses over the next few months.
The Plastics Industry Association (PLASTICS) didn’t return a request for comment, but an industry publication, Plastics Today, reported that the association was urging legislators to vote against the bills: “PLASTICS notes that it has attempted to work with the bills’ sponsors ‘to try and redirect the bills toward policies that are proven to reduce litter and increase diversion rates. Unfortunately, we’ve been unable to have the bills amended to a point where we can support them,’” according to the publication.
The Plastics Industry Association (PLASTICS) didn’t return a request for comment, but an industry publication, Plastics Today, reported that the association was urging legislators to vote against the bills: “PLASTICS notes that it has attempted to work with the bills’ sponsors ‘to try and redirect the bills toward policies that are proven to reduce litter and increase diversion rates. Unfortunately, we’ve been unable to have the bills amended to a point where we can support them,’” according to the publication.
Wilson says that the
comprehensive nature of the legislation is the only way to effectively reduce
plastic pollution, and with California being the fifth biggest economy in the
world, the impact of this legislation is likely to be felt in other states.
“I think it’s fair to
say that we have a history of seeing manufacturers conform to California laws,”
he says. “We saw it with auto emissions — it’s a big enough market that it
should spur change across the industry.”
For that ripple effect
to happen, California first needs to pass its landmark legislation.
The bills will now
need to clear the natural resources and appropriations committees in the
opposite houses of their origin before having a chance at a floor vote by Sept.
13. If they pass those hurdles and earn the governor’s signature, the
legislation would set a high bar for other states.
“I think it is a line
in the sand that essentially says if we don’t take this approach, we don’t
solve the problem,” says Wilson. “It’s not only trying to solve a problem, it’s
trying to shift the narrative on how you solve the problem. This is actually an
expression of the world we want and one we think that can work, and absent
that, we’re a dog chasing its tail.”
Tara
Lohan is
deputy editor of The Revelator and
has worked for more than a decade as a digital editor and environmental journalist
focused on the intersections of energy, water and climate. Her work has been
published by The Nation, American Prospect, High Country News,Grist, Pacific Standard and others. She is the editor of two books
on the global water crisis. http://twitter.com/TaraLohan