Report lays out viable pathway to ‘Break the Plastic Wave’. It says ‘immediate action’ could stem tide by more than 80%.
A new analysis by The Pew Charitable Trusts and SYSTEMIQ finds that without ‘immediate and sustained action’, the annual flow of plastic into the ocean could nearly triple by 2040.
But the study also identifies solutions that could cut this volume by more than 80% using technologies that are available today, if key decision-makers are willing to make systemwide changes.
The findings from the scientific analysis were released today in a report, “Breaking the Plastic Wave: A Comprehensive Assessment of Pathways Towards Stopping Ocean Plastic Pollution.”
Our results indicate that the plastic crisis is solvable. It took a generation to create this challenge; this report shows we can solve it in one generation
The release coincides with the July 23 publication of the technical underpinnings of the report in an article in the journal Science, “Evaluating Scenarios Toward Zero Plastic Pollution.”
The research found that if no action is taken to address the projected growth in plastic production and consumption, the amount of plastic entering the ocean each year would grow from 11 million metric tonnes to 29 million metric tonnes over the next 20 years, equivalent to nearly 50 kilograms of plastic on each metre of coastline worldwide.
Because plastic remains in the ocean for hundreds of years and may never truly biodegrade, the cumulative amount of plastic in the ocean by 2040 could reach 600 million tons – equivalent in weight to more than 3 million blue whales.
And COVID-19 has presented additional challenges in the fight to end ocean-bound plastic pollution, as single-use plastic consumption has increased during the pandemic, according to the International Solid Waste Association.
Plastic flow
Working with scientists and experts around the world, Pew and SYSTEMIQ reached the report’s conclusions using a first-of-its-kind economic model that quantifies the flow and amount of plastic in the global system and compares the quantity of ocean plastic pollution between 2016 and 2040 under six scenarios: from no change from the projected rising flow of plastic into the ocean (noted in the report as “business-as-usual”) to a total overhaul (called the “system change scenario”) of the world’s plastics system, including its production, collection, consumption, and disposal/recycling. The model quantifies the associated cost, climate, and employment implications of each scenario.
Although progress has been made in addressing the global plastic challenge, the report finds that current commitments by government and industry will reduce the amount of plastic flowing into the ocean only by 7% by 2040.
And without meaningful change, about 4 billion people worldwide are likely to be without organised waste collection services by 2040, contributing significantly to the projected amount of ocean plastic pollution; closing this gap would require connecting more than 500,000 people to collection services per day until 2040.
“Breaking the Plastic Wave”
“Breaking the Plastic Wave” identifies eight measures that together could reduce by 2040 about 80 per cent of the plastic pollution that flows into the ocean annually, using technology and solutions available today.
Among them are reducing growth in plastic production and consumption, substituting some plastics with alternatives such as paper and compostable materials, designing products and packaging for recycling, expanding waste collection rates in middle- and low-income countries, increasing recycling, and reducing plastic waste exports.
In addition to improving ocean health, adopting the changes outlined in the report could generate savings of $70 billion for governments by 2040, relative to business-as-usual; reduce projected annual plastic-related greenhouse gas emissions by 25%; and create 700,000 jobs.
While the system change scenario reduces annual ocean plastic pollution rates by more than 80 per cent, it will take an unprecedented level of action and will still leave more than 5 million metric tonnes leaking into the ocean each year in 2040.
Fully eliminating the flow of ocean plastic pollution will require dramatically increasing innovation and investment, with significant technological advances, new business models, and a greater emphasis on research and development.
No single solution
“There’s no single solution to ocean plastic pollution, but through rapid and concerted action we can break the plastic wave,” said Tom Dillon, Pew’s vice president for environment.
“As this report shows, we can invest in a future of reduced waste, better health outcomes, greater job creation, and a cleaner and more resilient environment for both people and nature.”
Plastic pollution presents a unique challenge for producers and users of virgin, or new, plastics given regulatory changes, such as bans on single-use plastic items, and growing consumer concern about the impact of plastic waste in the environment.
Breaking the Plastic Wave’ leaves no viable excuse on the table; we have today all the solutions required to stem plastic flows by more than 80 per cent. What we now need is the industry and government resolve to do so
But it is also a unique opportunity for providers of new and existing materials and industries that use circular business models and reuse and refill systems, which are designed to keep products and materials in use for as long as possible.
“Our results indicate that the plastic crisis is solvable. It took a generation to create this challenge; this report shows we can solve it in one generation,” said Martin Stuchtey, SYSTEMIQ’s founder and managing partner.
“‘Breaking the Plastic Wave’ leaves no viable excuse on the table; we have today all the solutions required to stem plastic flows by more than 80 per cent. What we now need is the industry and government resolve to do so.”
The University of Oxford, University of Leeds, Ellen MacArthur Foundation, and Common Seas collaborated with The Pew Charitable Trusts and SYSTEMIQ to produce “Breaking the Plastic Wave.”
The report was also developed in partnership with a panel of 17 global experts.
Circular economy solution
The Ellen MacArthur Foundation’s perspective on the study, – The circular economy solution to plastic pollution – sets out clear urgent actions for businesses and governments, including:
- ELIMINATE the plastics we don’t need, not just removing the straws and carrier bags, but rapidly scaling innovative new delivery models that deliver products to customers without packaging or by using reusable packaging.
- Rapidly design all plastic items to be reusable, recyclable or compostable. It is also crucial to fund the necessary infrastructure, rapidly increasing our ability to collect and CIRCULATE these items. This will require around USD 30 billion on-going annual funding in a best case scenario
- INNOVATE at unprecedented speed and scale towards new business models, product design, materials, technologies, and collection systems to accelerate the transition to a circular economy.
‘Breaking the Plastic Wave’ confirms that the vision of a circular economy for plastic is the only way to address plastic waste and pollution at the source, it says.
Compared with business-as-usual, the circular economy has the potential to reduce the annual volume of plastics entering our oceans by 80%, reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 25%, generate savings of USD 200 billion per year, and create 700,000 additional jobs by 2040.
To turn the tide on plastic waste and pollution, we need to radically increase our efforts and speed up the transition to a circular economy
Dame Ellen MacArthur said: “Breaking the Plastic Wave brings an unprecedented level of detail into the global plastic system, confirming that without fundamental change, by 2050 there could be more plastics than fish in the ocean.
“To turn the tide on plastic waste and pollution, we need to radically increase our efforts and speed up the transition to a circular economy. We must eliminate the plastics we don’t need, and drastically reduce virgin plastic use. We need to innovate to create new materials and reuse business models.
“And we need improved infrastructure to ensure all plastics we use are circulated in the economy and never become waste or pollution. The question is not whether a circular economy for plastic is possible, but what we will do together to make it happen.”