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Replacing Plastics with Alternatives Is Worse for Greenhouse Gas Emissions in Most Cases

Environmental Science & Technology 2024 67 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 70 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Fanran Meng, Fanran Meng, Fanran Meng, Miguel Brandão, Jonathan M. Cullen Jonathan M. Cullen Jonathan M. Cullen Jonathan M. Cullen

Summary

An analysis of 16 common product categories found that in 15 out of 16 cases, plastic products generate 10% to 90% fewer greenhouse gas emissions over their lifetime than alternatives made from glass, metal, paper, or cotton. While this does not address microplastic health concerns, it highlights the tradeoff: simply replacing plastics with other materials could worsen climate change, so policies should focus on using plastic more efficiently and improving recycling.

Plastics are controversial due to their production from fossil fuels, emissions during production and disposal, potential toxicity, and leakage to the environment. In light of these concerns, calls to use less plastic products and move toward nonplastic alternatives are common. However, these calls often overlook the environmental impacts of alternative materials. This article examines the greenhouse gas (GHG) emission impact of plastic products versus their alternatives. We assess 16 applications where plastics are used across five key sectors: packaging, building and construction, automotive, textiles, and consumer durables. These sectors account for about 90% of the global plastic volume. Our results show that in 15 of the 16 applications a plastic product incurs fewer GHG emissions than their alternatives. In these applications, plastic products release 10% to 90% fewer emissions across the product life cycle. Furthermore, in some applications, such as food packaging, no suitable alternatives to plastics exist. These results demonstrate that care must be taken when formulating policies or interventions to reduce plastic use so that we do not inadvertently drive a shift to nonplastic alternatives with higher GHG emissions. For most plastic products, increasing the efficiency of plastic use, extending the lifetime, boosting recycling rates, and improving waste collection would be more effective for reducing emissions.

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