By Craig Rucker
Just as people were beginning to breathe a sigh of relief thanks to the Trump administration’s rollback of onerous climate policies, the United Nations is set to finalize a legally binding Global Plastics Treaty by the end of the year that will impose new regulations and, ultimately, higher costs on one of the world’s most widely used products.
Plastics–derived from petroleum–are found in everything from water bottles, tea bags, and food packaging to syringes, IV tubes, prosthetics, and underground water pipes. In justifying the goal of its treaty to regulate “the entire life cycle of plastic–from upstream production to downstream waste,” the U.N. has put a bull’s-eye on plastic waste. “An estimated 18 to 20 percent of global plastic waste ends up in the ocean,” the UN says.
As delegates from over 170 countries prepare for the final round of negotiations in Geneva next month, debate is intensifying over the future of plastic production, regulation, and innovation. With proposals ranging from sweeping bans on single-use plastics to caps on virgin plastic output, policymakers are increasingly citing the 2020 Pew Charitable Trusts report, Breaking the Plastic Wave, as one of the primary justifications.
But many of the dire warnings made in this report, if scrutinized, ring as hollow as an empty PET soda bottle. Indeed, a closer look reveals Pew’s report is less a roadmap to progress than a glossy piece of junk science propaganda—built on false assumptions and misguided solutions.
Pew’s core claim is dire: Without urgent global action, plastic entering the oceans will triple by 2040. But this alarmist forecast glosses over a fundamental fact—plastic pollution is not a global problem in equal measure. According to a study in Science Advances, over 90% of ocean plastic comes from just 10 rivers, eight of which are in Asia. The United States, by contrast, contributes less than 1%. Yet Pew treats all nations as equally responsible, promoting one-size-fits-all policies that fail to address the real source of the issue.
This blind spot has serious consequences. Pew’s solutions—cutting plastic production, phasing out single-use items, and implementing rigid global regulations—miss the mark entirely. Banning straws in the U.S. or taxing packaging in Europe won’t stop waste from being dumped into rivers in countries with little or no waste infrastructure. Policies targeting Western consumption don’t solve the problem—they simply shift it or, worse, stifle useful innovation.
The real tragedy isn’t plastic itself, but the mismanagement of plastic waste—and the regulatory stranglehold that blocks better solutions. In many countries, recycling is a government-run monopoly with little incentive to innovate. Meanwhile, private-sector entrepreneurs working on advanced recycling, biodegradable materials, and AI-powered sorting systems face burdensome red tape and market distortion.
Pew pays lip service to innovation but ultimately favors centralized planning and control. That’s a mistake. Time and again, it’s been technology—not top-down mandates—that has delivered environmental breakthroughs.
What the world needs is not another top-down, bureaucratic report like Pew’s, but an open dialogue among experts, entrepreneurs, and the public where new ideas can flourish. Imagine small-scale pyrolysis units that convert waste into fuel in remote villages or decentralized recycling centers that empower informal waste collectors. These ideas are already in development—but they’re being sidelined by policymakers fixated on bans and quotas.
Worse still, efforts to demonize plastic often ignore its benefits. Plastic is lightweight, durable, and often more environmentally efficient than alternatives like glass or aluminum. The problem isn’t the material—it’s how it has been managed after its use. That’s a “systems” failure, not a material flaw.
Breaking the Plastic Wave champions a top-down, bureaucratic vision that limits choice, discourages private innovation, and rewards entrenched interests under the guise of environmentalism. Many of the groups calling for bans are also lobbying for subsidies and regulatory frameworks that benefit their own agendas—while pushing out disruptive newcomers.
With the UN expected to finalize the treaty by early 2026, nations will have to face the question of ratification. Even if the Trump White House refuses to sign the treaty–which is likely–ordinary Americans could still feel the sting of this ill-advised scheme. Manufacturers of life-saving plastic medical devices, for example, are part of a network of global suppliers. Companies located in countries that ratify the treaty will have no choice but to pass the higher costs along, and Americans will not be spared.
Ultimately, the marketplace of ideas—not the offices of policy NGOs—will deliver the solutions we need. It’s time to break the wave of junk science—not ride it.
This article originally appeared in The Daily Caller
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What about all those single use plastic items in the health industry from drips to sterile packaging to syringes etc etc?
If they’re thinking of going back to glassware it isn’t just autoclaves they’ll need, money will be required…
“…heavier containers like glass will incur higher levies, meaning products in glass bottles and jars could be set have an additional cost in excess of 10p whereas products in plastic or metal containers will only have a marginal cost.”
https://www.britglass.org.uk/news-comment/glass-sector-smashed-government
The one easy recyclable – glass – will be priced out of the market.
Not exactly joined up thinking.
I just brought in our milk from the porch, delivered early this morning. The dairy uses glass bottles and we pay a premium for its products’ quality and use of glass. It beats store bought quality by a lot though.
Thanks for the info. I thought milk quality was down to the cow, but apparently it is the packaging, with glass having magical quality enhancing properties.
Incidentally: my childhood memories in England include being woken at dawn by the rattling and clanking of milk bottles being delivered to and collected from doorsteps.
In Winter milk was often frozen pushing the foil cap off and a milk-popsicle sticking out of the top, in Summer sour if not taken in from the doorstep in good time. Also in Winter, Blue Tits pecked through the foil to get at the cream layer – good energy source – in the days before milk was homogenised – an excellent source of salmonella.
Then having to remember to wash and put empties out the night before, coming home in the dark and kicking them over smashing them.
Ay yes – nostalgia isn’t what it used to be, but there is a good reason why we stop using/doing X and start using/doing Y.
Give me plastic any time.
strat:
Exactly!
Unfortunately, I was in a US hospital for 10 days last Fall. Much better for the experience, but to your point the amount of single-use paper & plastic was amazing. Gowns, drapes, IV tubing & bags, syringes and sterile packaging for these and multiple other items. It would be nearly impossible to maintain sterility without using plastic. Attempting to reuse glassware will be a disaster from infectious disease and cost standpoints. There is just no way to reliably re-sterilize many of these medical items [using autoclave, chemicals, UV light,…]
The UN’s feel-good plastic policy is more virtue signalling nonsense.
Expanding research into more rapidly degrading plastics makes a lot more sense. That and solutions to where the 90% of the dumping of plastic trash occurs.
Autoclaves operate under pressure using super-heated steam at 120C. Nothing survives that. An alternative is to use ethylene oxide gas under pressure.
Sterilisation is not the issue.
Using non-disposable gowns, masks, drapes,etc requires extensive laundry facilities, and large inventories because most of the stuff is going to be in the wash, some will be in use, some will be stocked ready for use. Intensive washing results in Hugh rate of wear and tear and replacement.
Laundry is labour intensive, space intensive, energy intensive.
It’s a similar situation with instruments and things like i/v drips. First intensive washing is required using sonic washers to clean out crevices and deliberately break instruments and glass with cracks in them maybe not noticeable to the naked eye but habitats for micro-organisms. High stock levels required for same reason as with linen. Glass items have a high replacement rate due to breakages.
Then there’s packing which is labour intensive, and autoclaving which is energy intensive and in the case of use of ethylene oxide requires special venting equipment.
Tubing is tricky. Rubber quickly perishes, and it is difficult to clean the lumen particularly if small bore, so better thrown away after use.
In summary: it’s mostly a cost issue. Disposables require reduced inventory, reduced storage/processing area, little labour or energy expenditure, and since used once, remove cross-infection risk. The benefits are economic, convenience and safety.
Just one word:
“According to a study in Science Advances, over 90% of ocean plastic comes from just 10 rivers, eight of which are in Asia.”
Of the 90%, Ganges and Yangtze covers about 90% of that, but regulations will be in the West …
Cheaper land and labour abroad means a lot of our plastic is exported to be reprocessed.
But the reality is that once it leaves our shores, no one really checks whether it is recycled.
https://news.sky.com/story/thousands-of-tons-of-uk-plastic-dumped-across-world-11218595
Green rule #1: Out of sight… out of mind.
One part of me wants to see plastic with a density > 1g/cc, then I remember diving in a spring in Texas and hearing aluminum cans clanking together under water.
Green rule #1: Out of their sight… out of their minds.
Meanwhile, tons of micro/nano plastics are spread by the modern wind mills in the West …
Whenever I see a piece of plastic trash along the road, I always think “stupid plastic”.
Oh wait.
Root causes are often too deep.
“the United Nations is set to finalize a legally binding….”
And totally unenforceable….
Will only apply to stupid countries that decide to enforce it… to there own detriment.
That’ll be the UK.
“…the United Nations is set to finalize a legally binding Global Plastics Treaty…”
Unless the US Senate passes it by a 2/3 majority and the President agrees, it won’t be legally binding in the USA.
Likewise the Paris Accord. The 1 year departure hiatus is not applicable since the treaty was never presented to Congress.
“It is a fact that small island developing states are not the ones that are using plastic as much as what’s flowing onto their shores and therefore, they become responsible for beach clean-up, which is not their doing,” Mathur-Filipp said. “They are unfairly impacted.”
I spent one summer working at a resort in Michigan, USA. One of my daily tasks was cleaning the beach early in the morning while the guests were still sleeping or eating breakfast. There was an occasional dead fish, most of the detritus was “stuff” left behind by guests the previous day — mostly paper and plastic.
Every summer there were a few days when the water line was covered with dead Mayflies — also known as “Canadian Soldiers.” And now and then the occasional dead fish.
I would like to see “what’s flowing onto their shores” in some detail. I’ll wait.
From what I have read, one of the problems that small islands face is the cost of energy. Those plastic bottles and other waste are potential fuel.
A few years back on an Indonesian cruise, we were doing maybe 10 knots, and looking down over the railing, plastic trash, mostly food wrappers were going by at least something every minute. We were somewhere in the Java Sea. Every time I saw something, I would restart the count. I didn’t get past 60 very often.
Expanded Polystyrene
fantastic stuff (initially extracted from the Styrax tree) wonderful non degrading stuff with fantastic benefits for saving energy pharmaceuticals (etc etc etc ). easily recyclable but benefits to be used as a soil additive for commercial or landfill purposes. I hope they ban only eps derived from fossil fuels and leave green natural eps alone
With the exception of the outlet regions of those 10 rivers, plastics in the water isn’t a problem. In a few years, nature breaks down and disposes of the plastics on it’s own.
Meccano still has more metal than plastic.
:-o)
If that genie gave me three wishes, one of them would be to change this all-too-common phrase.
Here’s an idea, sanction the countries with the top 10 polluting rivers until they clean them up.
I’m a fan of plastic pill packers and fruit punnets (previously made of wood**). When you finish the pills, do you toss the container in the garbage with or without the cap in-place?
**Young folks should have a look: 31893-qjhq.jpeg (900×675)
Non-Government Organizations (NGOs).
Didn’t they used to called “Lobbyist”?
Why the name change? And why does it only seem to apply to left-leaning groups?
Did “lobbyist” become a bad word or did that allow them to get taxpayer dollars?
The war on plastics is just another front in the war on fossil fuels.
Fossil fuels provide more than energy. In trying to stop use of fossil fuels and label them “stranded assets” to discourage investment, the Eco-fascists come up against the truth, they would still be needed for other essential things, particularly plastics. Damn!
Without the revenue from fossil fuels as energy sources to help cover to costs of exploration, production, etc and contribute to profits, this burden would fall on by-products, particularly plastics causing widespread economic problems.
So. Get rid of plastics, get rid of arguments against the war on fossil fuels.
I can see the issue of autoclaves breaking down or malfunction. Further they require their time to do the job, in a rush or running on a too tight budget guess what might happen? Furthermore the rising cost of electricity and the more and more unreliable grid…autocalves are not really energy savers.
Milk bottle nostalgia…milk used to be milk way back in the days, today it’s water mixed with whatever cheap fat they could get their hands on. Doesn’t matter the package.
Reusing glass bottles came out of fashion back in the days thanks to artificially increasing the cost for washing and handling (unqualified labour), blaim OPEC? lol no…it’s the government stupid.
Plastic has it’s unbeatable single use advantages, properly collected and burned afterwards allows you to convert the stored energy either in heat or electricity you can use.
Recycling plastic is nonsense from an energy efficiency standpoint, already discussed a long long time ago and roundly ignored ever since…sadly.
So for today I think I rest my case, skål and enjoy the summertime…besides a cool beer I have women on my mind (thanks Mungo Jerry, great song)
US out of UN!
UN out of US!!
the United Nations is set to finalize a legally binding Global Plastics Treaty by the end of the year
Is any resolution passed by the UN actually “legally binding”? I’ve seen no evidence of it. Their resolutions are essentially international treaties that affect only those who are signatories to the treaties, and even then, not so much. I don’t see the US signing this under the current administration.
I’m not sure this is any more concerning than any of the other nonsense the UN votes on every year. The UN is just a forum for globalist elites, pretending to be relevant, to do things that pretend to matter. What occupies their energies, as Shakespeare put it, “is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.” The UN doesn’t set global policy, though the parade of court jesters in its General Assembly would like to think so. The issues it addresses are just barometers for the policies being considered or implemented by the member countries and amplified to the gullible nitwits of other nations. Nothing we do can change the policies implemented in other countries.
And nothing the UN does will change the plastics management policies of its member states. The polluters do so because they are poor countries lacking regulations to manage waste streams. The wealthy countries already properly manage waste streams so they don’t end up in the oceans, for example. When the poor countries become wealthy, they too will begin to care enough about the environment to enact policies to better manage waste.
More worthless international government. The UN sucks. Fortunately passing the costs on goes both ways. Every increase in cost attributable to the UN plastic policy should be paid for with the money that otherwise would have gone to the UN. They don’t deserve any money from us anyway and they need to get the hell out of our country.
My understanding from decades ago is that the UN is all about preventing wars.
They fail at that and have gotten entangled in all sorts of things and fail at those, too.