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Author comment: Addressing the toxic chemicals problem in plastics recycling — R0/PR1

2024
Bethanie Carney Almroth

Summary

This policy commentary argues that expanding plastics recycling — as called for in global treaty negotiations — is currently unsafe because the chemical composition of plastic waste is largely unknown and many plastics contain hazardous substances including plasticizers, pigments, and unintentionally added reaction by-products. Researchers recommend improved chemical transparency, group-based hazard regulations, monitoring programs, and economic incentives aligned with the waste hierarchy.

Ongoing policy negotiations, such as the negotiations for a future global plastics treaty, include calls for increased recycling of plastics. However, before recycling of plastics can be considered a safe practice, the flaws in today’s systems must be addressed. Plastics contain a vast range of chemicals, including monomers, polymers, processing agents, fillers, antioxidants, plasticizers, pigments, microbiocides and stabilizers. The amounts and types of chemicals in plastics products vary, and there are little requirements for transparency and reporting. Additionally, they are inherently contaminated with reaction by-products and other nonintentionally added substances (NIASs). As the chemical composition of plastics wastes is largely unknown, and many plastics chemicals are hazardous, they therefore hinder safe recycling since recyclers are not able to exclude materials that contain hazardous chemicals. To address this problem, we suggest the following policy strategies: 1) improved reporting, transparency and traceability of chemicals in plastics throughout their full life cycle; 2) chemical simplification and group-based approaches to regulating hazardous chemicals; 3) chemical monitoring, testing and quality control; 4) economic incentives that follow the waste hierarchy; and 5) support for a just transition to protect people, including waste pickers, impacted throughout the plastics life cycle.

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