Make the Throw-Away Go Away

Before the 1950s and 60s, we built the majority of products we produced and consumed to last. People returned glass milk bottles for sterilization and re-use. Restaurants offered ceramic plates and stainless-steel cutlery, and the plastic bag didn’t exist yet.

But since then, as technology progressed we have developed an ability to produce low-cost products en masse. This, alongside a growing culture of disposability, has given us mountains of waste, devastated landscapes, and a culture of “single-use”.

Today we use around 50% more natural resources than 30 years ago and produce a whopping two billion tons of waste each year.

Drowning in waste

It may not be surprising that one of the main culprits is plastic. It litters our land and chokes our oceans. It can be found in quite literally every corner (and stomach) on this planet, even on Antarctica. Plastic is produced using fossil fuels and is responsible for 5% of greenhouse gas emissions globally. Its toxic nature causes harm to millions of living creatures, including humans. We’ve all seen the devastating images of entangled turtles and suffocated seabirds.

Whilst the plastics industry would like consumers to think that many plastic products are recyclable, less than 10% of all the plastics produced since the 1950s has actually been recycled with the rest incinerated, dumped in landfills, or left to pollute the environment.

There is now a growing awareness of the long-term destructive impacts of plastic and our need to “turn off the tap” on the production of plastic. As a result, several corporations and even governments have announced commitments to switch to alternatives, mainly paper.

What’s less well known is that each year, we cut down three billion trees to make paper packaging.

That’s roughly an area the size of the United Kingdom. Many of these trees come from the world’s most endangered forests, which are home to Indigenous communities that depend on forests for their livelihood as well as countless threatened and endangered species. These forests are important carbon storehouses and vibrant, unique eco-systems that once displaced can never be replaced.

We are currently in the midst of a climate and biodiversity crisis that calls for the protection and restoration of forest landscapes.

To do so, it’s imperative that we limit the number of trees that are used to make single use products and packaging.

It’s ironic that in 1959, Swedish engineer Sten Gustaf Thulin invented the plastic bag as an alternative to paper bags, which were considered bad for the environment because of their contribution to forest loss.

It’s clear that neither plastic nor paper is an environmentally safe option.

We shouldn’t have to choose between paper or plastic at all, especially when we have readily available alternatives. It’s time to halt our reliance on single-use products altogether.

Paper or Plastic?

This is why over 180 organizations have come together to call for an end to single-use, throwaway products, asking for transformational change to our production, consumption and end-of-use systems to enable a truly circular economy.

Dogwood Alliance, along with these organizations, is calling on governments, businesses, investors, non-profits, and civil society to reject single-use products in favor of reusable, recyclable, and compostable ones made with the lowest possible environmental and social footprint.

Many of the solutions already exist…

  • Reuse and refill systems
  • Products made from 100% recycled materials that can we can feed back into a circular system
  • Alternative materials to fossil fuels and tree-based feedstocks
  • Smart re-design to save on overall material use.

Most importantly, we must work collaboratively to enable transformative action on single-use items. To do so will reap far-reaching benefits for both ourselves and our natural world.

Want to take action now? Here’s a list of actions to support wide-scale systems change on single-use.

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