Latest news with #PlasticWaste


CBS News
07-08-2025
- Health
- CBS News
UN treaty to curb plastic pollution could result in major changes, Chicago expert says
Plastic waste is projected to triple by 2060, with its use known to impact health and cause damage. It is a topic for world leaders meeting in Geneva, Switzerland, who this week have been discussing a treaty meant to end the problem. A doctor and professor at the University of Illinois Chicago who was part of the meetings said the treaty is a long time coming and could result in major changes. A brand-new report on the risks and consequences of the world's reliance on plastics places the cost of plastic pollution to health worldwide at $1.5 trillion. The report was released as world leaders and thousands of delegates from nearly 180 nations meet in Geneva, Switzerland — working, again, on the world's first treaty on plastic pollution. "People are frankly outraged by the plastic in their environment," said United Nations Environment Programme executive director Inger Andersen. The goal of the UNEP-facilitated talks this week is "to develop an international legally binding instrument on plastic pollution." This is the sixth attempt by the UNEP to do so, and the world leaders are hoping it's the last. "What they come up with in Geneva could well impact on how we approach plastics," said Dr. Peter Orris, an attending physician at UI Health and a professor at the school of public health at UIC. When CBS News Chicago spoke to Orris, he had just returned from a week in Geneva, where he was part of meetings on plastics. "These plastics we are concerned about are in our own bodies, throughout our bodies, in the food we eat, fish we eat," Orris said. With 19 million to 23 million tons of plastic waste leaking into aquatic ecosystems, that figure could increase by 50% by 2040 without immediate action, according to the UN. But Orris, as a Chicago connection to the conversations happening on a global stage had a focus outside such critical issues as pollution in the oceans. Orris represented the World Federation of Public Health Associations, discussing plastics in the medical field. "The technology now, and the medical technology has developed where we are able to see these micro- and nanosized particles, and we now understand these plastics we are concerned about are in our own bodies," Orris said. "The health sector is a very big sector all over the world and uses a lot of plastics." Orris said this needs to change. "We have to find ways of reducing the single-use plastics in healthcare," said Orris. "If we can do things to change our behavior in health care and reduce the overall impact of these plastics and the toxins, we want to be involved in it." Back in Chicago, Orris is keeping tabs on what is still happening overseas. "Hopefully, it will be positive," he said. "We will see happens at the end." The conversations in Geneva continue for another week.


The Standard
02-08-2025
- Science
- The Standard
New push to reach plastic pollution pact
Plastic waste has been found from the bottom of the seas to the tops of mountains © LAKRUWAN WANNIARACHCHI / AFP


Reuters
23-07-2025
- Reuters
Exxon plastic waste suit faces first major hurdle
July 23 (Reuters) - Plastic waste is ubiquitous – from empty water bottles to grocery bags, the detritus litters beaches, parks and roadways. The question for a federal judge in San Francisco now is whether Exxon Mobil can be held liable for such pollution, or if a novel suit claiming the company has created a public and private nuisance should be dismissed. A coalition of four environmental groups last year sued Exxon, opens new tab, a leading producer of polymers used to make single-use plastics, alleging the company wrongly led consumers in California to believe that plastic was easily and safely disposed of, when in reality, less than 5% of it is recycled in the United States. A spokesperson for Exxon, which has denied wrongdoing, did not respond to requests for comment, and the company's outside counsel from O'Melveny & Myers declined comment for this column. Exxon in court papers, opens new tab said the plaintiffs' theory that consumers purchased more plastic based on statements by Exxon was 'to put it mildly, a real stretch.' During an hour-long oral argument last week over Exxon's motion to dismiss, Chief U.S. District Judge Richard Seeborg pushed lawyers on both sides to lay out the parameters of nuisance law, while also hinting he might allow the claim to move forward – but more on that later. Nuisance, a centuries-old legal doctrine with its roots in English common law, applies when a defendant's conduct interferes with a public or private right to the enjoyment of life or property. Classic examples include blocking a public road or a factory that emits noxious odors. In recent years, nuisance claims have also been successfully invoked by state and local governments in litigation against opioid makers for their role in the epidemic of addiction and overdose deaths, netting close to $50 billion in payouts. Lead paint manufacturers also settled nuisance claims in California in 2019, agreeing to pay $305 million without admitting wrongdoing. Unlike personal injury claims, nuisance cases do not seek damages to compensate plaintiffs for an injury. Instead, they seek to make the party responsible for the nuisance pay to abate, or fix, the condition. The defense bar has called public nuisance a "super tort, opens new tab," complaining that such claims offer a way to sidestep the more rigorous requirements to prevail in a product liability lawsuit. Here, the Sierra Club, Surfrider Foundation, Heal the Bay, and San Francisco Baykeeper, which also allege violations of California's unfair competition law, want abatement, injunctive relief, compensatory damages and attorneys' fees, noting in a press release, opens new tab that California taxpayers shell out an estimated $420 million each year to clean up and prevent plastic pollution. Their case was brought in tandem with a similar action by California Attorney General Rob Bonta. The AG's higher-profile suit, opens new tab remains bogged down in a fight over venue after Seeborg remanded it to San Francisco Superior Court. Exxon has appealed that decision to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, where the dispute remains pending. In the meantime, the suit by the environmental groups has proceeded in federal court, where Seeborg must now decide if it can survive the motion to dismiss. 'What is the nuisance?' he asked plaintiffs lawyer Tyson Redenbarger, a partner at Cotchett, Pitre & McCarthy. 'Is it that these items are plastic (and) plastics cause pollution? Or is it that people acquire it thinking it's more recyclable than it is?' 'It's a very broad claim,' Seeborg added. 'My problem is, is it so broad that I can't really get my hands around?' Redenbarger countered that the nuisance standard itself is 'quite broad,' arguing that Exxon's 'years-long campaign to tell the public that plastic can be safely disposed of' led consumers to buy more of it, and that unrecycled plastic waste winds up in waterways or leaks chemicals into landfills. Redenbarger and spokespeople for the environmental coalition did not respond to requests for comment. Last year, New York Attorney General Letitia James came up short in a similar suit accusing PepsiCo of polluting the environment with single-use plastic packaging. In dismissing the case, a New York state court judge ruled it would run "contrary to every norm of established jurisprudence" to punish PepsiCo, because it was people, not the company, who ignored laws prohibiting littering. But Seeborg, who was appointed to the bench in 2009 by President Barack Obama, offered some indication he might not be so quick to toss the environmental groups' case – at least not at this stage of the litigation. When Exxon lawyer Dawn Sestito, a partner at O'Melveny, argued that unlike in the lead paint case — where companies allegedly touted the paint for interior use while knowing it was toxic — it's hard here "to imagine that talking about plastics as recyclable could be considered a promotion for hazardous use,' she said. Moreover, government entities also convey the message that plastic is recyclable, she said. Seeborg responded that the plaintiffs' "accusation is that you knew it wasn't, and you're in the business of polymer production,' he said. 'You may quite possibly prevail in terms of undermining the nuisance claim, but we're at the posture right now of just whether or not it can even go forward.' He added, 'This case isn't about whether going into the marketplace and saying 'Let's all recycle' is actionable. They're claiming something very different.' A few minutes later, when Sestito took aim at what she flagged as a basic disconnect in the plaintiffs' case – how is it, she said, that stating 'a product or plastics could be recyclable results in more plastic ending up in oceans or beaches or becoming pollution?' – Seeborg again shut her down. 'I don't want to beat the same drum over and over again, but is that something that would need to be explained at this stage of the litigation?' he said. 'It ultimately may need to be explained, but the question really is, have they articulated a legal theory that can advance, if they proved everything.'


Express Tribune
12-05-2025
- Business
- Express Tribune
Moot to spotlight plastic waste solutions
Development Communications Network (Devcom-Pakistan) and partners have scheduled a conference titled "Beyond the Plastic Waste" on June 3 under its annual flagship event "Pakistan Environmental Awards and Conference of Best Practices". The event marks World Environment Day more meaningfully with a thematic conference and appreciation awards for the good work. The conference will include the high-level inaugural panel on "Plastic Waste: From Pollution to Solution". The other two sessions will focus on "Single-use Plastics: Sustainable Consumption, Production and Alternatives", and "The Waste Business: 3Rs and Integrated Resource Recycling (IRR)". The Second Pakistan Environmental Awards will also be conferred upon some of the best practices promoted under the Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), Corporate Environmental Compliance (CEC), and environmental conservation projects by the nongovernmental sector. Some individuals and media persons will also be awarded for their good work. Devcom-Pakistan Executive Director Munir Ahmed said: "By beating the plastic pollution, together we can create a healthier future for the planet earth. This year's World Environment Day theme reminds us of our collective responsibility. This year's World Environment Day comes exactly two months before countries meet again to continue negotiating a global treaty to end plastic pollution. Led by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), and held annually since 1973, it has grown to be the largest global platform for environmental outreach. It is celebrated by millions of people across the world. The Republic of Korea will host World Environment Day 2025 with a focus on ending plastic pollution globally.


NHK
07-05-2025
- General
- NHK
Bali children learn virtues of recycling
An educator in Bali offers disadvantaged children free English and Math classes in exchange for collecting plastic waste.