With eight million metric
tons
of plastic entering our oceans each year, plastic litter is a global issue that
is receiving increasing attention from consumers, NGOs and governments around
the world. While this is a complex issue, identifying and implementing solutions
is achievable if the entire value chain — from plastic producers such as
Dow, to consumer
product
and waste management
companies — work together. Here are some of the ways we are collaborating with
partners from NGOs to industry peers to help find new solutions:
Achieving sustainability and safety
From packaging food to keep it safe and fresh, to helmets and artificial limbs,
plastic is an integral part of our daily lives. How do we continue to meet
consumers’ needs for quality products without compromising on sustainability and
safety?
Companies across the value chain that are involved in the production of plastic
can play a role in developing more sustainable packaging solutions that not only
meet customer needs, but also benefit the planet. At Dow, we created
RecycleReady
Technology,
which provides packaging manufacturers with a sustainable packaging system that
qualifies for the Sustainable Packaging Coalition’s How2Recycle program.
This allows consumers to recycle packaging for products like granola and nuts by
dropping them off at participating retail and grocery stores.
Another good example is the work being done by consumer brands in the food and
beverage space. The NextGen
Consortium, convened by Closed Loop
Partners, is a multi-year partnership founded by Starbucks and
McDonald’s aimed at addressing single-use food packaging waste globally in
three stages. The first was the NextGen Cup Challenge in September 2018,
where startups around the world were challenged to design more recyclable cups —
NextGen announced 12
winners
of the challenge in February. The next two stages are the commercialization of
the winning cup designs and collaboration with value chain partners in the cup
industry to provide testing, piloting and opportunities to scale the solution.
Educating consumers and supporting waste management infrastructure
Learning how to
recycle
starts at home and within our local communities. Helping people understand the
do’s and don’ts, and how to play an active role in solving the issue of plastic
litter, will be a critical step in implementing a successful waste management
system.
Plastic producers can work together with local communities, governments, school
systems and industry partners to educate consumers and spur action. Through our
own social initiative — Project
Butterfly
— in South Africa, we are partnering with local nonprofit organizations to
educate and engage with nearby communities about proper waste management and
organizing clean-ups. As part of this project, we are working with
WILDTRUST, a South African environmental nonprofit, to create a program that
empowers local entrepreneurs to generate income by collecting and exchanging
recyclable waste.
Beyond education, our industry needs to explore and invest in new, innovative
solutions and infrastructure to make it easier for consumers to recycle
hard-to-recycle plastics.
In North America, Dow collaborated with several partners including
Recyclebank and Keep America Beautiful to create the Hefty®
EnergyBag®
program. Consumers can discard hard-to-recycle plastics via collection or
drop-off points at participating stores, which are sent to local materials
recovery facilities and converted into valuable resources. As of July 2018, we
collected more than 176,500 bags and diverted more than 115 tons of plastics
from landfills, equivalent to roughly 92 million snack-sized chip bags and
converted into energy resources.
In addition to these initiatives, a new
handbook
from Circulate Capital and The Ocean Conservancy, "Investing to Reduce
Plastic Pollution in South and Southeast Asia," provides a blueprint for
immediate investment solutions for waste management infrastructure in the
region. The handbook lays out many factors affecting the entire plastics value
chain — from consumer-packaged goods companies to plastic producers — to help
investors, governments, NGOs, entrepreneurs and academic institutions identify
the best opportunities to end plastic waste.
Finding recycling alternatives and solutions
While progress has been made to improve waste management infrastructure and the
recyclability of products, some items remain hard to recycle.
Dow is demonstrating the value of post-consumer plastic waste by working with
partners to convert plastic waste into next-generation building materials,
including plastic roads and schools. We have used over 220,000 pounds of plastic
to construct roads around the world including two roads in Freeport, Texas
this past year. We also collaborated with Conceptos
Plásticos, a startup that transforms plastic
waste into constructive systems, to build sustainable classrooms in Cartagena,
Colombia. Our goal is to collaborate with the industry to drive fast adoption
of these solutions.
These examples highlight some of the many ways we are working to keep plastic
waste from entering our ecosystems. We need even more collaboration within the
supply chain to implement meaningful solutions that will tackle plastic waste on a broad scale.
Get the latest insights, trends, and innovations to help position yourself at the forefront of sustainable business leadership—delivered straight to your inbox.
Director, Global Sustainability & End Use Marketing
Dow
Published May 27, 2019 2pm EDT / 11am PDT / 7pm BST / 8pm CEST