Plastics mines? Europe struggles as pollution piles up
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[May 11, 2018]
By Environment Correspondent Alister Doyle
OSLO (Reuters) - Europe has sent just over
half the plastic waste it used to ship to China to other parts of Asia
since Beijing's environmental crackdown closed the world's biggest
recycling market in January. The knotty problem is what to do with the
rest.
Some of the surplus is piled up in places from building sites to ports,
officials say, waiting for new markets to open up. Recycling closer to
home is held back by the fact that the plastic is often dirty and
unsorted, the same reasons China turned it away.
Countries led by Malaysia and Vietnam and India imported far more of
Europe’s plastic waste in early 2018 than before, European Union data
show, but unless they or others take more, the only options will be to
either bury or burn it.
In an overcrowded continent where landfills are much more restricted
than elsewhere, burning is the obvious option to help generate
electricity or heat from hundreds of thousands of tonnes of surplus
waste.
But more radical ideas, such as putting oil derived plastic back
underground to "mine" back when recycling becomes more sophisticated,
are being aired as Europe tries to work out what to do.
European waste policies "need to become much more nuanced, because some
landfill might actually be quite good," professor Ian Boyd, chief
scientific adviser for the British government's department of
environment, food and rural affairs, told Reuters.
"I'm putting out a challenge to the current system," he said, referring
to the fact that waste policies in Europe either ban or limit landfill
but do little to restrict what has been dubbed "skyfill" - the release
of pollutants into the air.
WASTE-TO-POWER
Europe has favored the construction of power plants that burn waste for
electricity or heat because land is scarce and landfills produce toxins
and greenhouse gases such as methane as organic waste - from food to
nappies - rots.
Waste-to-power plants produce greenhouse gas emissions too, but in most
of Europe they are exempt from carbon taxes that stand at about 14 euros
a tonne in an industrial market.
Boyd said buried plastic could become a valuable resource only if the
penalties for emitting greenhouse gases, both in making plastics and
burning them, were far higher than today.
Globally, plastics accounted for 390 million tonnes of carbon dioxide
emissions in 2012, ranging from production to incineration and
equivalent to the emissions by a nation such as Turkey, according to the
Ellen MacArthur Foundation, a think-tank that specialises in recycling.
The plastics industry takes issue with such assessments, saying they
ignore the vast contribution of plastic in reducing other emissions by
for example preserving food and reducing the weight of transport.
The Confederation of European Waste-to-Energy Plants (CEWEP), a group of
some 400 plants using 90 million tonnes of municipal waste to provide
heat and electricity for millions of people, said burying and then
mining back plastic was a fantasy.
"Digging waste into landfills and then waiting until a magic technology
pops up in the future is not a responsible option," CEWEP managing
director Ellen Stengler said, adding that the idea was a minority view
she heard "here and there" in Europe.
Just cleaning plastic waste before burial would be hugely expensive,
plastic would degrade underground and there would be risks such as fire,
she said.
The latest major U.N. assessment of climate change, in 2014, also
floated the idea that cities might sort and bury waste such as metals,
paper and plastics to create "a material reservoir that can be mined"
sometime in future.
(Graphic: EU plastics waste exports - https://tmsnrt.rs/2I9C4Zh)
NEW MARKETS
Plastic pollution is surging and could, according to UN Environment,
exceed the weight of fish in the oceans by 2050.
China, which used to process half the world's exports of plastic waste,
has insisted on higher standards of cleanliness and sorting to prevent
waste that cannot be recycled being burned, which, in its case, often
means in open pits.
[to top of second column] |
Plastic and glass waste
lies on the ground during the Tamborrada on the Day of San
Sebastian, in which people dressed as Napoleonic-era soldiers and
cooks perform in a twenty-four-hour drum and wine barrel playing
session, interspersed with eating and drinking, in the Basque
coastal town of San Sebastian, Spain, January 20, 2018.
REUTERS/Vincent West/File Photo
For Europe, the restrictions have so far acted as an effective ban, according to
official data reviewed by Reuters which showed exports to China crashing by 96
percent in the first two months of the year.
Nations led by Malaysia, Vietnam, Turkey, India and Indonesia took on around 60
percent of the waste, but the surplus means Europe's market for low-grade waste
has collapsed.
A tonne of plastic waste for export, with up to 20 percent impurities such as
paper labels, could be sold for between 25 and 40 pounds a tonne in April 2017,
according to British recycling group letsrecycle.com.
Last month, by contrast, you had to pay between 40 and 60 pounds to get someone
to take it away.
Despite this, Patawari Borad of the Bureau of International Recycling in
Brussels said recycling within Europe had not increased dramatically. "One can
only guess that this unsorted material is going for either energy or
incineration."
Waste-to-energy body CEWEP said it saw no sign extra plastic was being burned.
Incinerators would notice a higher share of plastics, Stengler said, because,
tonne for tonne, they produce a lot of energy.
Proponents of the idea of burying plastic include Keith Freegard, a director of
Axion Polymers in England, one of Europe's leading recyclers of waste from cars
and electronics.
"All those tonnes of carbon-rich waste material that were going into the
landfill are now being released into the sky. Why are we allowing this free
access to 'skyfill'?" said Freegard, who is vice chair of the British Plastic
Federation’s Recycling Group.
"We should separate and store plastic in a well-controlled landfill as a future
mine," he told Reuters.
To produce a megawatt hour of electricity, he said a waste-to-energy plant would
need to burn 345 kg of plastic, emitting 880 kg of carbon dioxide. By contrast,
a gas-fired power plant would generate the same amount of energy by burning 132
kg of natural gas, emitting just 360 kg of carbon dioxide.
Stengler and nations that favor waste-to-energy plants say such accounting is
misleading and that waste-to-energy helps replace fossil fuels, a key goal of
the 2015 Paris climate agreement to limit heat waves, floods, droughts and
rising seas.
Swedish government estimates, for instance, show that three tonnes of municipal
waste contain as much energy as a tonne of oil.
World production of plastics has increased about twentyfold since the 1960s and
is expected to double again over the next 20 years, according to the European
Commission.
Erik Solheim, head of U.N. Environment in Nairobi, said the global focus for
plastic policies should be to cut use, especially products such as microplastics
used in some cosmetics or drinking straws that he said were unnecessary.
"The best of all is to avoid the plastics we don't need," he said. Burying waste
and mining it sounds "a difficult option".
Of 27.1 million tonnes of plastic waste collected in Europe in 2016, 41.6
percent went to energy generation, 31.1 percent to recycling including in China,
and 27.3 percent to landfills, according to Plastics Europe. It was the first
time that recycling rates exceeded landfills, it said.
By contrast in the more spacious United States, 75 percent of 33 million tonnes
of collected plastics was landfilled in 2014, according to the Environmental
Protection Agency. Fifteen percent was burnt and 9.5 percent recycled, it said.
And worldwide, a report by U.N. scientists in 2014 estimated that only about 20
percent of municipal solid waste is recycled, about 13.5 percent used to
generate energy and the rest dumped.
(Reporting by Alister Doyle; editing by Philippa Fletcher)
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