Plastic & Petrochemicals

[Plastic production]”affects children’s lives. It increases cancer rates, and it hurts people,” Arellano says. “Why would we want to participate in something that is actively oppressing and hurting people’s health?”
— Yvette Arellano, Director of Fenceline Watch on NPR Life Kit with Rebecca Davis & Audrey Nguyen | July 13, 2021

99% of plastic is derived from fossil fuels. Why is this important?

The plastics produced derive from either fracked gas or oil. The explosion of natural gas production has led to the ever-increasing demand for natural gas liquid, which is rich in the chemicals that serve as the building blocks of plastic production.

Naphtha, a product of oil refining, is another key to plastic production. Only five companies account for over half of global naphtha sales: BP, Chevron, ExxonMobil, Shell, and China National Petroleum Corporation. Four of five have refining capacity along our coast within an hour of our front door.

The production of plastic releases toxics like 1,3, butadiene, benzene, ethane, styrene, toluene. They can cause several health effects like: headaches, fatigue, weakness, memory loss, nausea, nose bleeds, and unconsciousness. In the long term, asthma, anemia, central nervous system damage, childhood leukemia and other cancers, kidney and liver damage, sterility,  and even death.[1] The effect is even more severe on children, seniors, and the already sick. [1] https://www.ciel.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/Plastic-and-Health-The-Hidden-Costs-of-a-Plastic-Planet-February-2019.pdf. These harmful exposures lead to developmental, neurological, reproductive issues along with known carcinogens and forever chemical. Chemicals like benzene are not necessarily mutagenic by themselves but are after they pass through the liver.

 A recent study by EIP uncovered that “two-thirds of the 90 plastics-related facilities in the Houston region violated air pollution control laws over the last five years and were subject to enforcement actions. But many more exceeded their permits and were not penalized, state records show.” Severely impacted families face physical and mental suffering and economic losses for multiple generations. Economic losses that have yet to be elevated from a lack of cumulative impact analysis

As partners of the Break Free From Plastic Movement, we dedicate ourselves to uplifting the disproportionate harm plastic presents to environmental justice communities at the fenceline of plastics production chemical facilities.

What is the Global Plastics Treaty?

Via - United Nations Environment Program

Nairobi, 02 March 2022 – Heads of State, Ministers of environment, and other representatives from the UN Member States endorsed a historic resolution at the UN Environment Assembly (UNEA-5) today in Nairobi to End Plastic Pollution and forge an international legally binding agreement by 2024. The resolution addresses the full lifecycle of plastic, including its production, design, and disposal. “Against the backdrop of geopolitical turmoil, the UN Environment Assembly shows multilateral cooperation at its best,” said the President of UNEA-5 and Norway’s Minister for Climate and the Environment, Espen Barth Eide. “Plastic pollution has grown into an epidemic. With today’s resolution we are officially on track for a cure.” 

The resolution, based on three initial draft resolutions from various nations, establishes an Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee (INC), which will begin its work in 2022, with the ambition of completing a draft global legally binding agreement by the end of 2024. It is expected to present a legally binding instrument, which would reflect diverse alternatives to address the full lifecycle of plastics, the design of reusable and recyclable products and materials, and the need for enhanced international collaboration to facilitate access to technology, capacity building and scientific and technical cooperation. (Read more here: https://www.unep.org/news-and-stories/press-release/historic-day-campaign-beat-plastic-pollution-nations-commit-develop )

Why is Fenceline Watch Involved?

“A holistic approach to tackling the existential crisis of plastic is essential. Our communities at the fenceline of plastic production stand in solidarity with those affected from extraction to waste. Our fight for survival is a fight for our future. It is our duty; we refuse to fail.”

- Yvette Arellano, Founder and Director of Fenceline Watch, CIEL Trustee,

Civil society and rights-holders from around the world are engaging in these negotiations to demand a treaty that protects human rights, health, and our environment. Tactics designed to wear us down will not succeed. We know that our human rights, our lives, our communities, and our planet are worth fighting for. We will continue to show up, speak out, and demand strong control measures across the entire life cycle of plastics — starting with reducing the plastics production that drives this crisis. We’re in this for the long haul: we will not back down or go away quietly.”

- Rachel Radvany, Center for International Environmental Law (CIEL)

 

Domestic Efforts: Break Free From Plastic Pollution Act

  • Placing a temporary pause on new and expanding plastic facilities until the Environmental Protection Agency updates and creates vital environmental and health regulations to protect frontline and fenceline communities;

  • Shifting the financial burden of waste management and recycling off municipalities and taxpayers to where it belongs: the producers of this waste;

  • Spurring massive investments in domestic recycling and composting infrastructure;

  • Phasing out certain single-use plastic products that aren’t recyclable;

  • Establishing minimum recycled content standards;

  • Launching a national beverage container refund program to bolster recycling rates;

  • Prohibiting plastic waste from being exported to developing countries;

  • And more proven policy solutions!


Below is a video featuring partners of RISE ST. JAMES, Energy Justice Network, and ECOTON all part of the Break Free From plastic movement sharing the real cost of plastic.

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