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Plastic pollution hotspots: global waste trade and environmental risk in Latin America
Summary
Following China's 2018 plastic waste import ban, Latin America absorbed significantly more low-quality, difficult-to-recycle plastics (PVC, polystyrene), with seven countries — including Mexico, Guatemala, and Honduras — identified as pollution hotspots combining high mismanaged waste rates with surging imports. The analysis documents how global waste trade shifts environmental burdens to lower-income nations with inadequate recycling infrastructure, accelerating regional microplastic contamination.
Abstract Plastic pollution is a growing environmental challenge, and Latin America is one of several Global South regions that have seen a rise in plastic waste imports. For 18 countries in the region, we combine a quantitative analysis of plastic scrap trade data (UN Comtrade) with an assessment of waste management capacity. Following China’s 2018 ban on plastic waste imports, Latin America saw increases in all types of plastic waste, and in particular, imports of low-quality (“difficult-to-recycle”) plastics, particularly polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and polystyrene (PS), increased considerably. We identify seven “plastic pollution hotspots,” or countries that have (1) high imports of low-quality (“difficult-to-recycle”) plastic waste AND (2) high rates of mismanaged waste: the Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, and Paraguay. Furthermore, we find that after 2018, difficult-to-recycle plastics have been recirculated within the region to countries with lower GDP per capita and limited waste management capacity, further disadvantaging the plastic pollution hotspots we identify. Our study provides timely evidence of the need to reduce plastics production, reduce chemical additives, and increase regulations surrounding hazardous plastic waste exports that are disproportionately impacting Global South regions.