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Plastic recycling: A panacea or environmental pollution problem

International Journal of Comprehensive Veterinary Research. 2024 231 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Nisha Singh, Tony R. ‎Walker

Summary

This review examined the effectiveness of plastic recycling as a solution to plastic pollution, finding that global recycling rates of only 9% are insufficient given annual production exceeding 400 million metric tonnes. The authors identified key gaps in recycling efficiency for thermoset plastics and proposed advanced recycling methods, design-for-recyclability principles, and the Global Plastics Treaty as emerging solutions.

Increasing plastic waste is a critical global challenge to ecological and human health requiring focused solutions to reduce omnipresent plastic pollution in the environment. While recycling has been touted as one solution to counter plastic waste and resource utilization, it has been largely ineffective in offsetting the impact of rising global plastic production of more than 400 million metric tonnes annually, due to low global recycling rates of only 9%. Over three decades since implementing plastic resin codes, recycling has favoured thermoplastics, neglecting thermoset plastics. There is a constant need to enhance overall recycling efficiency by exploring advanced methods, as enormous gaps exist in fully unlocking the potential of plastic recycling. We identify critical gaps associated with plastic waste recycling and its potential environmental impacts. We discuss substantial progress in recycling technology, designs-for-recyclability with controlled chemical use, and economic incentives to expand markets for recycled plastics and to curb plastic leakage into the environment. Additionally, we highlight some emerging strategies and legally binding international policy instruments, such as the Global Plastics Treaty that require further development to reduce plastic waste and improve plastic recyclability.

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