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CKA Uber
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PostPosted: Wed Jun 19, 2019 11:16 am
 


Garbage Apocalypse - the waste for recycling that gets shipped to Asia from lazy Western countries is the plastic trash that's ending up in the oceans. Want to know where the Pacific Garbage Patch came from? It started with the con of these recycling programs that got shoved down our throats:

https://business.financialpost.com/opin ... ments-area

$1:
I don’t know whether to laugh or cry at the Canadian government’s recent announcement that it is going to ban certain single-use plastic items. This is feeble virtue signalling of the type now exhibited by politicians around the world. But it will do almost nothing to deal with the problem of plastic in the oceans.

The tsunami of waste that is sinking countries in southeast Asia is now a comparatively well-known problem. For a while, Asian countries seemed powerless to end the trade, but a few days ago, the Philippines and Malaysia made a stand, and sent a few small shipments of this problematic material back to Canada, its country of origin.

Return was possible because the waste was still containerized; it was clear where this “material for recycling” — in reality, dirty mixed waste — had come from. So when push came to shove, Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte simply threatened to dump it on a Canadian beach, and the impasse was ended. However, this is not true of most of the plastic waste now in these countries. Since the start of 2018, when the Chinese government announced that it was putting a stop to the annual importation of waste from rich countries, the quantities shipped to southeast Asia have been prodigious. And most of it is there for good.

Mixed dirty plastic waste is almost impossible to recycle, which is why rich countries, with their tight environmental regulations, send it off to poorer places. But recycling is no easier in southeast Asia, and only a small portion of the 106 million tons of waste shipped over the past 20 years or so was ever converted to new plastic granules. Most was burned in the open air, or dumped in rivers, from where it found its way to the oceans.

This is the ugly consequence of the green economy and the urge to recycle. The damage that is being done has become increasingly clear as Asian countries have moved to put an end to the trade in waste. A bans on plastic straws in Canada is a gesture to make it look as if politicians are doing something, while avoiding the difficult decisions. But those difficult decisions are not going to go away, and they may soon become unavoidable.

At one time I was very much a lone voice warning about these adverse consequences of plastic recycling and dirty plastic scrap exports. But since the awful truth has become more widely known, the pressure to do something about it has increased. So, despite heavy lobbying from the “recycling” industry, the parties to the United Nations Basel Convention recently agreed to put an end to the trade in plastic scrap: a ban will come into effect by 2021.

The ban is a necessary and welcome step for poor countries, who are suffering the horrendous public health and environmental consequences of the trade. But the consequences for the West are frightening. In most wealthy countries, the best option for dealing with this material is to burn it, but incineration capacity is almost everywhere inadequate. In the EU, restrictions on landfill have sharply constrained that alternative, and new rules soon to come into force will kill it off entirely. To make things worse, EU law now stipulates that 55 per cent of plastic packaging is going to need to be recycled by 2030. This is impossible with current technologies and indeed it may never be economically viable or environmentally friendly.

The waste crisis is therefore in danger of spiralling out of control. It is likely that wealthy countries will have to introduce emergency measures to protect public health and the environment.

Unfortunately, ideas similar to the EU’s are emerging from the G7 process. Last year’s Halifax summit resulted in a Marine Plastic Charter, a document that signally failed to address the environmental and public-health disaster caused by plastic waste. As the MV Bavaria steams back towards Vancouver with those container loads of plastic “recycling,” it is going to become clear to them that virtuous-sounding words will keep them out of trouble for only so long. Painful decisions are soon going to have to be made.


Good for the Asian countries for standing up to the West and saying no more. Given the way things work though if Asia becomes off-limits for trash dumping then the bastards will probably find ways to send it to Africa or South America, if they're not doing that already. This "recycling" is nothing but a fucking scam and has been ever since it was forced onto Western taxpayers and then further on to the Asian countries that got turned into out-of-sight out-of-mind landfills for our convenience

This could be the worst thing the West has ever done to the developing world. Opium wars, slavery, colonization, endless economic exploitation, theft of incalculable amounts of natural resources. The trash armaggeddon could make all of those things pale in comparison in terms of damage done.


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PostPosted: Wed Jun 19, 2019 11:32 am
 


Oh, it's worse than that Thanos! They mix the waste you so carefully sort, right in the truck. Why wait?

Image


Garbage, recycling in the same truck? Why it happens, and why some say it's concerning

tl;dr, it's all about the money.


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CKA Uber
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PostPosted: Wed Jun 19, 2019 12:06 pm
 


$1:
Corona Launches Plastic-Free Six Pack Rings

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Corona becomes the first global beer brand to trial 100% plastic-free six pack rings.
The new rings will be piloted in Mexico at the beginning of the year, with plans to test in the United Kingdom next year.

MEXICO CITY--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Corona announced that it will pilot plastic-free six pack rings in select markets as part of the brand’s commitment with Parley for the Oceans to lead the industry with eco-friendly packaging. Both Corona and Parley have a shared mission to help protect the world’s oceans and beaches from marine plastic pollution.

Although Corona is primarily packaged in glass and fiberboard, the brand sees an opportunity to help redesign a common source of plastic in the category: six pack rings. The plastic-free rings being tested are made from plant-based biodegradable fibers, with a mix of by-product waste and compostable materials. If left in the environment, they break down into organic material that is not harmful to wildlife, whereas the industry standard plastic six pack rings are made from a photodegradable form of polyethylene that results in increasingly smaller pieces of plastic if not recycled. Although most plastic rings are recyclable, the reality is that the majority of all plastic ever created hasn’t been recycled2, which is the motivation for brands like Corona to pursue solutions that avoid the material entirely. That journey starts in the brand’s homeland of Mexico, where the plastic-free rings will be piloted in Tulum at the beginning of the year...


https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/ ... Pack-Rings


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