Earth Day 2018 Was About Plastics Pollution—But Greens Missed Target

Biodegradable Plastic Articlei

Guest essay By Steve Goreham

April 22 was designated by the Earth Day Network as Earth Day 2018. This year’s Earth Day was dedicated to ending global plastic pollution. While efforts to reduce plastic pollution are needed, the campaign missed the mark by emphasizing measures to eliminate the use of plastics.

Earth Day Network’s “Plastic Pollution Primer and Action Toolkit” identifies important problems such as litter and accumulating plastic in the ocean. It proposes effective measures to reduce plastic pollution such as local beach clean-up and recycling. But then the primer goes overboard, promoting radical proposals such as “whenever possible, refuse plastic” and “living a plastic-free life.”

Plastics are essential to modern society. We fabricate food containers, boat paddles, shoes, pipes, toys, smart phones, and thousands of other goods from plastic. Plastic is integral to medical services, used in heart valves, artificial joints, and catheters. Every day, society consumes approximately 450 million plastic bottles and 2.7 billion plastic bags worldwide.

From an objective point of view, plastics are a miracle material. Plastics are composed of long synthetic molecules of carbon and hydrogen, derived from petrochemicals, with amazing chemical properties. Plastics are moldable, impervious to water, inert in normal room-temperature conditions, light weight and strong, able to deform without breaking, and inexpensive.

But the valuable characteristics of plastic, a low-cost non-reactive material with wide applicability, produce both misguided and justified fears about environmental impacts. The Earth Day campaign raised concerns about the volume of plastics going to landfills, about fossil fuel feedstock for plastic, and about “leakage” of plastic into the environment. The landfill and fossil fuel concerns are misguided, but the concern about plastic accumulation in the environment is valid.

Environmentalists decry landfill plastic, but modern landfills are designed to accept waste with a minimum of environmental impact. Landfills in developed nations use a waterproof lining to prevent leaching of chemicals into underground water aquifers. Plastic and other garbage is crushed each day and covered with soil to reduce smell and litter and to prevent the growth of vermin and insect populations.

Nor are we running out of landfill space, except in local situations or in small nations. It has been estimated that, at current throwaway rates, all US municipal waste for the next 1,000 years could fit in a landfill 300 feet tall and 30 miles on a side. Compaction could reduce this volume by more than half.

In addition, the waste recovered by recycling, composting, and combustion is rising faster than waste is being generated. According to data from the Environmental Protection Agency, the amount of US waste annually deposited into landfills peaked in 1990 and has been slowly declining for more than 20 years. Plastic going into landfills is a minor issue.US Waste Disposal Graph Article

Most plastic comes from oil or natural gas refining, therefore a target in the ongoing war on hydrocarbons. The Earth Policy Institute states, “Manufacturing of the nearly 28 billion plastic bottles used each year to package water in the United States alone requires the equivalent of 17 million barrels of oil.”

This sounds alarming, but it’s mistaken. Plastic is a by-product of refining waste. Only about four percent of the world’s oil is used to produce plastic, with only about one percent used for bottles. If plastic bottle production were halted, the volume of petroleum used in refining would hardly change.

 

A valid concern, however, is the accumulation of plastic in the environment, particularly the oceans. Dr. Jenna Jambeck at the University of Georgia estimated that 4.8 to 12.7 million tons of plastic waste entered the world’s oceans in 2010, or about 1.7 to 4.6 percent of total plastic production. These waste numbers are rising with increasing production.

Some scientists warn of a growing Pacific Ocean garbage patch, a huge area of ocean current whirlpool north of Hawaii, where plastic is said to be accumulating. Contrary to some reports, an observer gazing at this ocean area does not see floating plastic waste. But scientists do measure a growing concentration of tiny plastic particles. Sea birds, which mistake plastic for food, have been found with plastic fragments in their stomachs.

The environmental movement proposes that we cleanse our daily lives of plastic, and well-meaning nations and communities have responded. France enacted a ban on all plastic dishware to go into effect in 2020. Hundreds of cities have banned plastic straws and plastic bags.

But banning plastic straws in Seattle or Fort Myers will not do much to solve the problem. Only about two percent of the plastic that ends up in the ocean originates in Europe and the US, where waste disposal is well-controlled. An estimated 82 percent originates in Asia and another 16 percent from the rest of the world.

Ultimately, the best solution may be plastics engineered to biodegrade in the environment over a short period of time. Many companies now offer biodegradable plastics for single-use applications, usually at a cost premium over common plastics. Unfortunately, green groups often oppose biodegradable plastics over fears of methane or carbon dioxide emissions.

Environmental advocates push for lifestyle changes and plastic bans, but ignore practical biodegradable solutions. Let’s recycle and clean up our beaches, but avoid feel-good plastic-banning campaigns.


Originally published in The Daily Caller, republished here at the request of the author. Steve Goreham is a speaker on the environment, business, and public policy and author of the book Outside the Green Box: Rethinking Sustainable Development.

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Rob
April 27, 2018 3:05 pm

They want to destroy the petrochemical industry.

Trevor
Reply to  Rob
April 28, 2018 12:26 am

Hi Rob : ” They want to destroy the petrochemical industry” you say !
UNFORTUNATELY…………………………..IT IS MUCH WORSE THAN THAT !!
“THEY” want to DESTROY ALL INDUSTRY ……especially in Capitalist WESTERN ECONOMIES.
If they can destroy all our industries ( THOSE THAT “WE” HAVEN’T ALREADY DESTROYED
OR EXPORTED TO FOREIGN COUNTRIES ……like China ! ) “THEY” have effectively destroyed “US”.
The places where CAPITALISM and FREE-ENTERPRISE FLOURISH are the ONLY places on EARTH
with a decent standard of living:,Education ( though THAT is increasingly becoming propaganda ! ) ,
Democracy , Free-Speech , the ability to PRACTISE any Religion ( or NOT practise any Religion ) ,
the ability to CHOOSE jobs and the ability to become PERSONALLY WEALTHY and PERSONALLY
OWN property , literally “the pursuit of happiness ” ARE ALL CONFINED TO WESTERNISED
CIVILISED COUNTRIES.
“ENVIRONMENTALISM” can ONLY succeed WHERE THERE IS PROSPERITY TO BE
ABLE TO AFFORD IT ! However , it has become ‘weaponised’ against us now !
BECAUSE “WE” ARE TOLERANT and Democratic “we” ALLOW this “GREEN FIFTH COLUMN”
the right to exist EVEN THOUGH “THEY” are trying VERY hard TO DESTROY US !
The ONLY WAY to counter their activities LAWFULLY is the VOTE FOR CONSERVATIVE
GOVERNMENTS and to DENY THEM A POLITICAL PLATFORM from which they can
operate. “THEIR” AIM is a Socialist Utopia and UNTIL THEY DESTROY OUR SOCIETY
they will not be able to establish it !
“THEIR” BLINDNESS TO THE TOTAL FAILURES IN THE RECENT PAST ( USSR ,
Cambodia ect….. ad infinitum ) OF DISASTROUS SOCIALISM does NOT deter them.
IDEOLOGY is NOT necessarily driven by common sense and misplaced altruism has
killed millions. “UTOPIA” is still the goal and “THEY” are relentless…..and in that sense
you have to admire their determination !
FOR EXAMPLE: Why hasn’t the MEDIA championed the EXTRACTION OF OIL FROM
TAR SANDS as “Fantastically successful environmental remediation…….forest and
wildlife now flourish where only deadly swamps existed previously ! ”
whereas they condemned a relatively MINOR OIL SPILL ( by comparison )
in the GULF OF MEXICO when an oil-well blew-out. ????????
“WE” NEED BETTER MEDIA & BETTER HEAD-LINES !
IT MEANS THAT “WE” NEED TO BECOME MORE SUPPORTIVE OF OUR
INDUSTRIES AND OUR FREEDOMS , get off our individual butts , AND
BECOME ACTIVISTS PROMOTING OUR OWN LIFESTYLES AND
MAKING SURE THAT OUR LEGISLATORS “GET IT RIGHT”
IF “WE” WANT A BETTER FUTURE !

Ernest Bush
Reply to  Trevor
April 28, 2018 8:56 am

What they want is to deny cheap energy to the masses. It makes us independent and not likely to need anything at all from them. They have seen to it that we don’t have nuclear reactors. They did not plan on the shale oil revolution. Today gasoline locally is $2.65 a gallon. When I was a teenager in the late 50’s, gas in Texas was under 50 cents. Given inflation it is cheaper today with all the gas taxes than it was then. The problem is wages have not kept up with inflation.

Editor
April 27, 2018 3:26 pm

Most plastics entering and floating in the oceans are being consumed by microbes — this has been known for years but is seldom mentioned — similar to the way that oil spill eating microbes are omitted from stories about oil spills. Oceanic plastics naturally breakdown into smaller and smaller pieces and eventually are entirely consumed by microbes….I have written about this several times here at WUWT.
That said, plastics should be recycled wherever possible — municipalities and local governments should insist and see that it is actually done.
The ubiquitous one-use plastic shopping bags should be required to be made of environmentally degradable materials that break down rapidly after exposure to sun and water. Their actual intended lifespan in use is about six hours — long enough to get the groceries home. Once they hit the trash stream or the environment, they should disintegrate within a week or so.
All of us should take care with our trash — this is a Kindergarten Rule — pick up after yourself — Don’t Leave a Mess for Others.
Using foreign aid funds to help poorer nations take out the trash will improve the plastic pollution problem and improve public health in those nations — a Win-Win.

RACookPE1978
Editor
Reply to  Kip Hansen
April 27, 2018 4:15 pm

Many grocery store plastic bags ARE immediately recycled into trash bag liners themselves.
Not all certainly, but many millions every day. The improvements in convenience, cleanliness, bug and infection reduction, hygiene, and just plain comfort-of-life are immense.
Unpopular to the enviro’s of course for that very reason: Convenience, ease of use, comfort, and cleanliness are “good things” and therefore “cannot be tolerated” nor made cheaper.

reallyskeptical
Reply to  RACookPE1978
April 27, 2018 6:42 pm

And look at the benefits. Plastic bags now mark most of the barbed wire in the mountain states.

Jeff Alberts
Reply to  RACookPE1978
April 28, 2018 9:12 am

“And look at the benefits. Plastic bags now mark most of the barbed wire in the mountain states.”
I live in a mountain state (WA), and there are lots of areas with barbed wire. Have not seen any bags on them.

Yirgach
Reply to  RACookPE1978
April 28, 2018 2:33 pm

,
Yeah, I find the same thing here in VT.
It seems that the lower elevations get most of the windblown debris.
Roadside debris are mostly in the form of aluminum beer cans, despite a $0.05 deposit.
There are no fast food within a 20 mile radius so we see little foam, except for the occasional Dunkins/Starbucks from the flatlanders.
May have put a grandson through college based on that goldmine…

kaliforniakook
Reply to  RACookPE1978
April 28, 2018 4:25 pm

Reallyskeptical – what state do you live in? I live Northeast of Reno, NV. Lots of wind. don’t see any plastic bags – not a one. Folks here reuse them for trash bags. I would not like to see them disintegrate after a week.
In Orange County, where I lived before, people re-purposed them for doggie doo pickup.
Are you sure you’re not just projecting? A lot of city folk think they know the open wilds of the west, and make all kinds of silly laws that don’t pertain. I can’t help but suspect you’re from the big city, and have never been more than two blocks from a street light.

GREY LENSMAN
Reply to  Kip Hansen
April 29, 2018 8:01 pm

The BBC writes its own debunk
https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/w3cswqym

Editor
Reply to  GREY LENSMAN
May 4, 2018 11:07 am

Grey Lensman ==> Ah….I rocketed through the known universe with the Grey Lensman for many years in my youth…
Thanks for the link to the BBC story — appreciated.

rckkrgrd
April 27, 2018 3:30 pm

Banning the use of plastic would create many worse problems.
Today, nearly all plumbing piping in residential housing is plastic, replacing the copper, iron, galvanized, lead that was used previously. This reduces the cost and reduces the use of toxic or scarce materials. It reduces the CO2 emitted from welding gas and from the lower weight of transport. It is also faster and easier to install, further reducing cost. Once installed it is much less subject to deterioration or damage from frost. The three common plastics for this application are PEX, ABS, and PVC.
This is just one of the many critical uses of plastic, which have little negative environmental impact.
It is only single-use plastic products that can be a problem.Styrofoam plates and cups easily break down into small pellets, that can actually be a favorable soil amendment but has no place in the ocean. Packaging is a problem every place but the landfill.
Bottles, whether plastic or glass can easily be controlled with a deposit/refund program.

Cointreau
April 27, 2018 3:40 pm

I have started picking up plastic bottles that litterbugs have thrown away and putting them into recycling bins. I also retrieve these bottles fron general waste bins in the street. I get some funny looks but I don’t care.

ozspeaksup
Reply to  Cointreau
April 28, 2018 3:29 am

in enlightened states in aus those containers inc the waxed milk ones earn you 10c each for collection n recycling
south aus does this for decades the roadsides are clean of glass n plastic litter mostly
driving to Victoria i was amazed at the broken bottles of road and roadsides as well as all the plastic waste thrown from cars.
huge difference
poor people travel the roadsides on pushbikes and collect waste to earn money
win win all round

ScienceABC123
April 27, 2018 3:51 pm

The Greens always miss the mark! Just check out the scene after they’ve had a protest march, it’s always trashed!

April 27, 2018 4:06 pm

George Carlin figured it out:

Rich Lambert
April 27, 2018 4:07 pm

The packaging material that lasts the longest in the environment is glass. Plastic doesn’t even come close to glass.

hunter
Reply to  Rich Lambert
April 28, 2018 10:50 am

There is a beach of colored weathered glass, in Russia.
Glass does sink and is very inert, but the idea of banning plastic is insultingly stupid.
Plastics, cheap energy, indoor plumbing and antibiotics are among the best things we have done.
Greens, in their misanthropic obsessions, seem to hate most if not all if those advances.

April 27, 2018 4:24 pm

Maybe a bit OT, but I saw a story a couple of days ago about all the plastic trash in the ocean (The Pacific?) being the size of Texas. I’ve only ever seen stories the plastic “islands” in the oceans.
It would seem that if they are really that big a satellite photo or two would be available?

NW sage
Reply to  Gunga Din
April 27, 2018 4:52 pm

Not off topic at all. The so called ‘garbage gyre’ in the mid pacific is fantasy. I’ve seen many pictures purportedly taken from ships traversing the ‘center’ of the area and no trash at all is visible. Oceanographic research can only collect amounts large enough to even test by towing fine seine nets for several hours.
And the ‘horror stories ‘ of small plastic particles [even tough plastics break down to smaller and smaller pieces] so small that “fish eat them” I’ve seen NO research which shows these very small particles cause anything at all when ingested by marine life and, since the plastics involved are quite inert there is not even a theoretical reason for assuming damage of any kind. It goes in one end and comes out the other unchanged – but even smaller.

ROM
Reply to  NW sage
April 28, 2018 2:14 am

Quoted from Science mag ; June 2014
https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2014/06/ninety-nine-percent-oceans-plastic-missing
Ninety-nine percent of the ocean’s plastic is missing;
Humans produce almost 300 million tons of plastic each year. Most of this ends up in landfills or waste pits, but a 1970s National Academy of Sciences study estimated that 0.1% of all plastic washes into the oceans from land, carried by rivers, floods, or storms, or dumped by maritime vessels.
Some of this material becomes trapped in Arctic ice and some, landing on beaches, can even turn into rocks made of plastic. But the vast majority should still be floating out there in the sea, trapped in midocean gyres—large eddies in the center of oceans, like the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.
To figure out how much refuse is floating in those garbage patches, four ships of the Malaspina expedition, a global research project studying the oceans, fished for plastic across all five major ocean gyres in 2010 and 2011.
After months of trailing fine mesh nets around the world, the vessels came up light—by a lot.
Instead of the millions of tons scientists had expected, the researchers calculated the global load of ocean plastic to be about only 40,000 tons at the most, the researchers report online today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
“We can’t account for 99% of the plastic that we have in the ocean,” says Duarte, the team’s leader.

AllyKat
Reply to  NW sage
April 28, 2018 8:55 pm

I love how it apparently did not occur to anyone that the original estimate of “ocean” plastic was wrong.

Biggg
Reply to  Gunga Din
April 27, 2018 6:27 pm

Gunga, The news media will do a bait and switch. They will describe all the plastic that is in the Pacific with islands of it floating around. Then a picture may be presented. It will not be a picture of an island of plastic in the Pacific, but of a harbor or lake that the local population of a third world country has used a dump. I personally such a pile in Vietnam. Once you get out in the country side of Vietnam you discover that the old practices are still practiced and many garbage dumps are along the shore of a lake. The reason, it is self flushing. Get some hard rain and the river rises and the garbage is flushed away. That practice is ending, but in a lot of third world countries it is still very prevalent.

Pop Piasa
April 27, 2018 4:56 pm

Shucks, guess we’ll have to insulate wire with asbestos or cardboard and hope it stays dry. Wait! here’s a novel idea…
http://inspectapedia.com/electric/Knob_and_Tube_Wiring438-DFs.jpg

wws
Reply to  Pop Piasa
April 28, 2018 9:25 am

Hey! What have you been doing up in my attic, taking pictures????

LarryD
April 27, 2018 5:01 pm

A lot of the Greens are just interested in virtue signaling, an exercise in hypocrisy and self-righteousness.
A smaller fraction want the rest of us forced back into a pre-industrial lifestyle, and wish for a 90% die-off.

Alan Tomalty
April 27, 2018 5:01 pm

There are an estimated 5 trillion pieces of plastic in the worlds oceans and we all have plastic floating in our bloodstreams. Whether all this is a potential carcinogenic nightmare or not, only medical science could possibly answer. However with their 2 sigma statistical standard, I dont have much confidence of any of their answers.
[?? .mod]

Reply to  Alan Tomalty
April 28, 2018 6:16 am

Cancer rates have been falling in the US since 1992. That should be a big clue. Our ability to detect minute particles and small amounts of radiation is primarily due to our ability to detect quantities too small to affect anything.

Ernest Bush
Reply to  Alan Tomalty
April 28, 2018 9:03 am

I don’t believe your statistic. It also doesn’t address size of the pieces or location. The green left loves to grab nice round big numbers out of the air at need.

MarkW
Reply to  Alan Tomalty
April 28, 2018 8:08 pm

How exactly do we get pieces of plastic in our blood stream?
Is someone sneaking in at night and injecting us?

MarkW
Reply to  Alan Tomalty
April 28, 2018 8:09 pm

According to the great state of California, everything is potentially carcinogenic.

KTM
April 27, 2018 5:17 pm

One would think that taking petroleum that humans have an insatiable need to convert to CO2 and instead converting it into a permanently inert solid would be every self-identified ‘environmentalist’s fondest dream.

Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy
April 27, 2018 5:29 pm

This study appears to be highly hypothetical in nature. Less than 50% of waste is going to land fills. Also, scientific land fills are very few and thus soil and groundwater contamination is high. Large part is burnt, some goes into rainwater drains, lakes, seawater [coastal cities], etc.
Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy

Ernie Friesen
April 27, 2018 5:49 pm

Has anyone ever heard of Plastic2oil . check it out it sounds like a reasonable solution to me.

Trevor
Reply to  Ernie Friesen
May 1, 2018 5:13 am

I like THAT pun !

Sara
April 27, 2018 6:01 pm

I don’t know how much more of a recycling thing you can do than to put the contents of the litter box into a thin plastic grocery bag. Cat litter is a specialized clay that absorbs liquids quickly, and plastic will keep it dry until it gets to the landfill. And the landfill will be full of methane from all those deposits of used cat litter and fish bones and candy wrappers, so that at some point, it can be mined for methane for use by the gas company.
The only issue I have with my use of plastic bags for cat litter is that some day, some archaeologist doing an exploratory dig on what he thinks is a midden kitchen will come across those bags of used cat litter, and wonder why, if we were all so civilized, we didn’t have flush toilets.

goldminor
Reply to  Sara
April 27, 2018 9:31 pm

+100

R. Shearer
Reply to  Sara
April 28, 2018 8:45 am

Landfill gas is already collected and used to generate electricity in many locales.

April 27, 2018 6:02 pm

When I was younger I clearly remember that two common forms of plastic washed up on beaches were tampon applicators and shotgun wads. I still see shotgun wads, but not too many tampon applicators.
Oh wait, maybe I have those mixed up …

Chimp
Reply to  Max Photon
April 27, 2018 6:06 pm

So, we need to breed microbes which enjoy nothing more than chowing down on applicator and wad plastic.
Somehow that doesn’t sound right.

Chimp
Reply to  Max Photon
April 27, 2018 6:07 pm

Environmentalists could promote a return to paper wadding and cartridges, but then more forests would have to die to satisfy evil humynity’s violent impulses.

Pop Piasa
Reply to  Max Photon
April 27, 2018 7:09 pm

Max, If I’d only photographed some of the items that were fished out of toilet traps by the plumbers at SIUE while I was a facilities manager. You name it, college kids try to flush it.

Pop Piasa
Reply to  Pop Piasa
April 27, 2018 7:15 pm

I do remember standing with the sewer plant operator, watching a stream of floating plastic tampon applicators coming off the skimmers and him remarking that synchronous estrus is observable in the sewage stream. (Odd dudes, sewage plant operators.)

Roger
April 27, 2018 6:20 pm

Back in the day refuse was burned. Now we have better particulate filters, incinerators could liberate us of the trash and use the energy liberated to make steam and drive a turbine. Once we get past the current CO2 scam it will all become clear – roading Monckton’s recent paper the day is not far off.

Biggg
April 27, 2018 6:21 pm

Jordan Peterson has become a hero to many including myself. He talks about personal responsibility and personal action. He describes the efforts of the social justice warriors as minimal effortless preening. It does not take a lot of personal effort to paint a sign or in a lot of cases just pick up a pre-made sign and show up at events and shout. To claim that we should do away plastics is easy, to actually do it takes personal responsibility and action. Peterson says to young people find a problem then go about fixing it. The linked video is about a person that Peterson uses as an example of someone that did just that. This is what environmentalism should be about. Boyan Slat went scuba diving and saw a problem, too much plastic. He set about to solve the problem.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BWr6BmROKO8

Reply to  Biggg
April 28, 2018 10:54 am

“Boyan Slat went scuba diving and saw a problem, too much plastic. He set about to solve the problem.”
He should be admired for his concern and resolve to solve a problem. But I think he would be more likely to be successful if he’d thought more initially about where the plastic in the ocean comes from.
It seems to the best solution lies in stopping plastic from getting into the ocean in the first place. And recent research points to only a relatively small number of rivers as the source of a large portion of ocean plastics, as has been discussed below:
https://wattsupwiththat.com/2018/04/27/earth-day-2018-was-about-plastics-pollution-but-greens-missed-target/#comment-2802431

GREY LENSMAN
April 27, 2018 7:39 pm

Two simple things
What is the difference between plastic and rock in a landfill
No rubbish left behind, collect and recycle it all, no threats no stigma.

michael hart
April 27, 2018 7:43 pm

I have yet to see any convincing evidence that plastics are generally any worse than other long-lasting materials in the environment such as cellulose from trees and plants or inorganic compounds that are found in sand, silt, or mud.
Plastics may offend the human eye, but there is no special chemical property that makes them inherently harmful. That’s why they are so widely used as food containers. It is also well within our abilities to make plastics that degrade faster, if we wish. But banning something is always the first resort of strident environmentalists, especially if it can be associated with the petroleum industry. Once again, the defenders of industry seem to have gone AWOL.

April 27, 2018 7:48 pm

I have to take exception with the idea that plastic is made from refining waste.
Most plastic is produced from ethylene and propylene which are best made from petroleum/natural gas or light naphta. It is possible to crack also the residual fractions, but it takes much more work.

GREY LENSMAN
April 27, 2018 8:48 pm

Is it really so difficult? Just collect it all, no fines, no threats, all of it. Then mine it.

nn
April 27, 2018 10:34 pm

Next year, it will be the population bomb, again, and the green blight, which includes the environmental impact of windmills and photovoltaic panels… Scratch the second. They can still squeeze life from the organic black blob.

nn
Reply to  nn
April 27, 2018 10:36 pm

The population bomb, again, and again, and again. The solution, the wicked solution, the final solution, Planned Parenthood, is not for the human oriented. You know you’re out there.

Reply to  nn
April 28, 2018 6:26 am

If they emphasize the population bomb again, I hope a group of dedicated green doctors set up a tent, offer free vasectomies to the male attendees, and encourage the women to shame the men into having them. Let them lead the way to Earth’s salvation!

kaliforniakook
Reply to  Jtom
April 28, 2018 4:35 pm

They want everyone else and their progeny to die. Not themselves. They are the perfect – at at least best – specimens.

StephenP
April 28, 2018 12:38 am

A use for plastic waste in the UK is being developed by some entrepreneurs who convert the waste into plastic pellets which are incorporated with bitumen and roadstone to make a longer lasting road surface. It also has use in repairing potholes when the degree of resilience provided by the plastic helps prevent the repair being broken up by the next heavy lorry driving over it.

michael hart
Reply to  StephenP
April 30, 2018 12:27 pm

Very sensible. Of course many useful road ingredients are already made from end-products of the petroleum industry, but greens don’t like to admit it to themselves. They still think we could manage with wooden wheels moving in a rut defined by cobblestones à la ancient Pompei.

Roy Hartwell
April 28, 2018 1:49 am

An article this week in the Daily Telegraph stated that scientists were worried that the melting Arctic ice would release massive amounts of plastic waste held in the ice.
Now, correct me if I’m wrong but how did the plastic end up in ice that is supposed to NOT have formed because of global warming which allegedly has all occurred since plastics were first developed on a large scale !
Perhaps our ancient ancestors did know a trick or two after all.

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