Over 550 Environmental Groups Rally Around Call for Biden to Act on Plastics Pollution in 2021

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Today, an unusually broad coalition of environmental groups, numbering more thanย 550, called on the incoming Biden-Harris administration toย address plastic pollution alongside fossil fuels, releasing an eight-point platform that largely focuses on ways the next administration could act without a Democratic majority in theย Senate.

โ€œMore than 99 percentย of plastic is created from chemicals sourced from fossil fuels, including an oversupply of fracked gas, which is spurring a global boom in new plastic production,โ€ the groups wrote in their Presidential Plastics Action Plan. โ€œThat plastic is causing serious environmental problems at every step of itsย lifecycle.โ€

The eight-point plan drew endorsements from organizations that have worked on problems created by plastic production at every stage, from the productionย of fossil fuels used by the plastics industry all the way to the plastics trash problems that follow consumer use ofย single-use products like straws andย bags.

That plan calls for the Biden administration to take specific actions in 2021, including using the spending power of the federal government to curb taxpayer-funded consumption of single-use plastic products, rejecting permits for new or expanded plastics manufacturing sites, and requiring existing plastics plants to use the best available technology to curb theirย pollution.

โ€œWeโ€™re really just asking that President Biden start enforcing the laws that we have,โ€ said Julie Teel Simmonds, attorney for the Center for Biological Diversity, an environmental nonprofit which helped to organize the plan, โ€œinstead of rubber-stamping these destructive plasticsย projects.โ€

The groups called for Biden to direct the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to update its plastic-related regulations under the nationโ€™s cornerstone environmental laws, including the Clean Air Act, the Clean Water Act, the Toxic Substances Control Act, and the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (which governs hazardous waste). These groups, which range from town and county-level grassroots groups to major national and international green NGOs,ย also want the U.S. government to stop subsidizing plastic production, asking Biden to take steps like ending Department of Energy loan financing for fossil fuel and plasticย production.


Newly manufactured plastic pellets, known as nurdles, washed up on the bank of the Mississippi River in Chalmette, Louisiana, after a lost shipping container spilled themย on August 2, 2020. Credit: ยฉ2020ย Julieย Dermansky

The plan also zeroes in on the issue of discarded and lost fishing gear, which environmental groups say has increasingly clogged the worldโ€™s oceans. โ€œThis fishing gear is often called โ€˜ghost gearโ€™ because long after it is lost it entangles, captures, and kills sea turtles, seabirds, marine mammals, and fish,โ€ the groups wrote. โ€œIt changes the marine environment, poses navigational hazards, introduces plastic into the marine food web, and creates a persistent marine debris and pollution problem, with high cleanupย costs.โ€

Senator Jeff Merkley of Oregon praised the initiative at a press conference today, arguing that plastic recycling has fallen far short of whatโ€™s necessary to respond to the problems that plastics have created. โ€œThe problem right now is that for decades, the mantra of the environmental story has been reduce, reuse, and recycle,โ€ he said. โ€œBut when it comes to plastic, itโ€™s not really whatย happens.โ€

Since plastic production first began 60 years ago, manufacturers have produced 8.3 billion metric tons of the stuff, National Geographic reported in 2018 โ€” and a stunning 91 percent of it was never recycled. According to a September NPR investigation, the oil and plastics industries have misled the public for years about the feasibility of recycling plastics, despite knowing the substantial economic and technicalย challenges.

Instead, most plastic has met one of three fates: buried in landfills, burned in incinerators, or bobbing in the worldโ€™s streams, rivers, and waterways as it washes towards theย oceans.

Diane Wilson returning fromย collecting plastic pellets known as nurdles from one of Formosaโ€™s outfall areas on January 15, 2020. Wilsonย was a lead plaintiff in a case against Formosa Plastics Corp. USA that resulted in a $50-million-dollar settlement and a consent decree that requires the company to stop releasing the nurdles it manufactures into local waterways leading to the Texas Gulf Coast. Wilson was also one of the organizers of the plan announced today. Credit: ยฉ2020 Julieย Dermansky

That last category represents an enormous amount of trash โ€” so much that a 2016 report from the World Economic Forum projected that by 2050, the worldโ€™s oceans will hold more plastic, measured by weight, thanย fish.

Thatโ€™s part of the reason that some groups participating in todayโ€™s call to action for the Biden administration have organized beach cleanups to collect plastic waste thatโ€™s washed ashore worldwide โ€” and that they are now working together with organizations that focus on how and where plastics areย produced.

In 2019, for example, the Surfrider Foundation organized over 47,000 volunteers to participate in 941 cleanups, removing nearly 300,000 pounds of trash from beaches around the U.S. But theyโ€™re also now endorsing the Presidential Plastics Action Plan to address the problem at itsย source.

โ€œBeach cleanups alone simply wonโ€™t solve the environmental disaster we have all played a part in creating in recent decades,โ€ Angela Howe, legal director for the Surfrider Foundation, said today as the plan was announced. โ€œOur ocean is dying a death of a thousand cuts, and we need a powerful, multifaceted approach to addressย it.โ€

The plan also focuses on the needs of those who live in communities where fossil fuels and plastics manufacturing takes place, including places where Bidenย campaigned.


Joe Biden, now President-elect, visited the Youth Empowerment Project (YEP) in New Orleans, Louisiana, on July 23, 2019. Credit: ยฉ2019 Julieย Dermansky

โ€œPetrochemical companies continue to locate new and expanded plastics facilities near existing fossil fuel infrastructure, which means they are targeting the Gulf Coast, Appalachia, the Ohio River Valley, and other communities that already shoulder a heavy burden of oil, gas, and plastic industry pollution,โ€ the plan says. โ€œAcross the United States, these facilities are often located in and have a disproportionate impact on low-income and minorityย neighborhoods.โ€

During this yearโ€™s presidential debates, former Vice President Joeย Biden recalled his own experiences growing up in Marcus Hook, Pennsylvania, which was and remains home to a dense array of fossil fuel refineries and chemicalย plants.

โ€œWhen my mom got in the car when our first frost, to drive me to school, turned on the windshield wipers and there would be an oil slick in the window,โ€ Biden said. โ€œThat’s why so many people in my state were dying and getting cancer. The fact is those frontline communities, it doesn’t matter what you’re paying them. It matters how you keep themย safe.โ€

Thatโ€™s a familiar message to organizers living along the Gulf Coast asย well.

โ€œHouston, Texas is home to the largest petrochemical complex in the nation, and it continues to expand,โ€ Yvette Arellano, the founder of Fenceline Watch, a Houston-based environmental justice campaign, and a recipient of the 2020 Community Sentinel award. โ€œThe true cost of plastic is ourย health.โ€


Yvette Arellano with Jane Collins during a โ€œtoxic tourโ€ at Buffalo Bayou across from Sims Metal Managementโ€™s Proler Southwest recycling facility in 2016. Credit:ย ยฉ2016ย Julieย Dermansky

โ€œThere is nothing common-sense about increasing cancer rates, sterility, or developmental issues in poor communities of color just for plastic,โ€ sheย added.

Sharon Lavigne of the Louisiana-based RISE St. James also spoke about her experiences living in an historically Black community where plastic and industrial pollution has left many of her neighbors with weakened immune systems as the COVID-19 pandemicย arrived.

โ€œAmericans have been in the streets shouting Black Lives Matter and We Canโ€™t Breathe all year,โ€ Lavigne, who also recently launched the Protect Our Parish project in opposition to the planned $9.4 billion Formosa plastics complex in St. James Parish, Louisiana, said. โ€œWell, our lives do matter and we canโ€™t keep breathing this pollutedย air.โ€


The Holy Rosary Cemetery next to Dow Chemical in Taft, Louisiana, located across the Mississippi River in the stretch between Baton Rouge and New Orleans that is heavily concentrated with chemical plants and oil refineries. The areaย has been dubbed both the โ€œPetrochemical Corridorโ€ and โ€œCancer Alley.โ€ย Credit: ยฉ2020ย Julieย Dermansky

Lavigne made one other ask of the Biden administration. โ€œI would like for them to come and see for themselves whatโ€™s going on in St. James Parish,โ€ she said. โ€œI would like for them to just ride around the community and see what we are going through. And if they stay for two hours, I promise you, they would leave with a stomachache or aย headache.โ€

Organizers acknowledged that it would take work to convince the Biden administration to act on their plan. โ€œWe are going to keep pushing him,โ€ said Teel Simmonds, adding that the shale gas used as a petrochemical feedstock cannot be a โ€œbridge fuelโ€ as the Obama administration hadย suggested.

Other signatories connected plastics production to climate change as well as to peopleโ€™s health, signaling perhaps a generational shift in attitudes toward these interconnectedย problems.

โ€œI began by studying climate change,โ€ said Duke University PhD student Imari Walker, โ€œand then realized how plastic pollution is deeplyย intertwined.โ€

โ€œWe have left every phase of the plastic pipeline unregulated for too long,โ€ said Walker. โ€œMy generation is being left with a warming world being filled with plastic pollution and we demandย action.โ€


Sharonย Lavigne (center), founder of RISE St. James, stands with her daughter Shamyra Lavigne (right) and RISE member Beverly Alexander (left), holding gift bags with masks and handย sanitizer that they distributed to community members in St. James Parish,ย on November 18, 2020. Credit: ยฉ2020ย Julieย Dermanskyย 

Main image: New Orleans advocates for federal action to address the plastic pollution crisis projecting an anti-plastic messageย onto aย New Orleans post office on December 7.ย Similar projections took place in San Francisco, Houston, Philadelphia, Washington, D.C., and Columbus, Ohio.ย Credit: All photos by Julie Dermansky forย DeSmog

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