While a few pockets of denial might remain, there is overwhelming international
recognition that we have a plastic problem on our hands. Too much is being
produced, too much waste is being mishandled, and not enough is recycled.
Based on this reality, governmental and corporate environmental stewards in
partnership with NGOs are embracing common goals around the reduction of virgin
plastic production and increased reuse and recycling. Consumers increasingly
factor sustainability into their purchase decisions, further pressuring brands
and generating momentum and support for change.
Initiatives to collect and recycle ocean-bound
plastics
are at the forefront of this movement, highlighting the plague of plastic waste
and demonstrating the path forward for recycled plastic as a valuable
commodity.
There’s now a pressing need to work in concert. Just like with the climate
crisis — no single nation or company can fix things on its own, and success will
only be realized via coordinated efforts.
Collaboration is the key
Turning plastic waste into reusable
feedstock
is an immense opportunity. It’s still a largely untapped market, ripe for
disruption. It is also incredibly complex.
To date, plastic
recycling
has nibbled around the edges. To get beyond this incremental progress, there
must be collaboration on a global scale. Organizations and efforts should be
synchronized and complementary — versus duplicative and
parallel
— maximizing the impact through efficiency and teamwork. In the world of ocean
plastic, this means the focus cannot solely be on removing plastic once it’s
already in the water. It must literally begin further upstream, by reducing the
flow of plastic into the economy as a whole.
Moving the needle also requires matching up supply and demand. Plastic-strewn
canals and beaches often aren’t next door to the factories that can make good
use of recycled ocean plastic feedstock. Most developed nations do an adequate
job of handling plastic waste, but lower-income countries often lack proper
disposal
infrastructure.
This means logistics is critical to get plastic waste from areas where
mismanagement reigns to places where it can find a new life in sustainable
products.
Tech companies stepping up is a start
From Silicon Valley and beyond, technology firms have become vocal leaders in
the quest to push back the tide of ocean plastic waste. They’re bringing their
notable names, innovative ideas, and broad customer bases to join the fight.
Catalyzing change and forging a path forward
It is hugely important that such well-known tech brands and leaders are working
to leverage their platforms to advance the cause, but there’s still more work to
be done. These efforts remain in silos and bubbles around specific materials,
industries and geographies; which limits their scope and keeps information and
best practices hidden away.
To drive meaningful demand for ocean plastics, there must be an organized,
authenticated, and trusted global supply. There’s more than enough plastic to go
around — hundreds of millions of metric tons of plastic waste is generated each
year. That represents hundreds of billions of dollars of potential material
simply trashed annually.
It is time to join together to
#seaplasticdifferently
and make ocean plastic a reliable, dependable, cost-efficient and preferred
material source; with programs and infrastructure in place to ensure quality,
and connect suppliers with brands and manufacturers. So many key players want to
be part of the solution. Only collaboration can transform ocean plastic from a
niche initiative to a core pillar of a circular and sustainable economy.
Interested in learning more about
Oceanworks
and ocean plastic? Join us on October 7 for our free, 30-minute, live webinar
that will cover what we've learned working with brands and their journeys to the
incorporation of recycled ocean plastic into their supply chains. We'll also
touch on best practices for working with recycled products & materials and a
sneak peek at what's coming soon from Oceanworks. Register today at
oceanworks.co/1year!
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Founder and President
Oceanworks
Rob Ianelli is founder & President of Oceanworks, the global marketplace for recycled ocean plastic products and materials.
Published Sep 29, 2020 8am EDT / 5am PDT / 1pm BST / 2pm CEST