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Impact of COVID-19 Pandemic on single-use of plastics in some American Firms: Policy Insights

Ecological Safety and Balanced Use of Resources 2022 4 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Koleayo Omoyajowo, Koleayo Omoyajowo, Koleayo Omoyajowo, Koleayo Omoyajowo, SUNDAY AMIOLEMEN, SUNDAY AMIOLEMEN, Benjamin Mwadi Makengo, Amos Ogunyebi Amos Ogunyebi, Benjamin Mwadi Makengo, Amos Ogunyebi, Amos Ogunyebi Amos Ogunyebi, Amos Ogunyebi

Summary

Researchers examined the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on corporate waste management programs across 42 American firms in Detroit, Atlanta, and Houston, finding significant changes in single-use plastic consumption patterns. The study provided policy insights on how pandemic conditions shifted corporate waste reduction, reuse, recycling, and recovery practices.

As COVID-19 continues to present unimaginable threats to the future of the environment, it is notimpossible to rethink that the continual existence of human race is at stake. More than 60% of toxicwastes released to the environment are largely contributed by manufacturing and service firms. Hence, this present study examined the impact of COVID-19 pandemic on corporate waste management program among selected American firms. A total of 42 notable firms across 3 cities in the US (Detroit, Atlanta and Houston) were successfully interviewed on their choices to reduce, reuse, recycle and recover their industrial waste since the outbreak of COVID-19. More than 80% of firms studied often generate plastics as waste; out of which, all firms (100%) agreed that COVID-19 encumbered their choices to manage plastic wastes. This study reasoned that COVID-19 will undoubtedly contribute to plastic pollution and its associated ecological risk in the US if appropriate measures are not painstakingly implemented. This study therefore recommends that Government and relevant stakeholders should restructure existing wastemanagement policies and sensitize American firms on grave dangers of plastic pollution and other toxicwastes in the environment. Meanwhile, this study has great implications for countries in the developing world. This is because developing countries are already mired with the challenges of managing plastic wastes in the pre- COVID-19 era and are further overwhelmed with the unprecedented plastic waste generation during COVID-19. Considering that in Africa and other developing nation, standard wastemanagement technologies and waste emergency policies to curb the pandemic is lacking or insufficient, and hence suggesting they may witness more serious impact of plastic pollution. Government at all tiers should not only make laudable waste management policies to curb environmental pollution, but must show sincerity of purpose and political-will to implement and enforce these polices to curtail impeding global impact of plastic pollution aggravated by COVID-19 pandemic.

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