Plastic pollution has become an environmental emergency, with the relentless flood of disposable plastics overwhelming our planet’s ability to cope
Our planet is drowning in plastic. Every year, millions of tons of single-use plastic end up in our oceans, harming marine life and disrupting ecosystems. These plastics take hundreds of years to decompose, leading to long-term environmental damage. Moreover, the lack of effective waste management infrastructure, particularly in rural and some urban areas, exacerbates this issue, leading to the proliferation of informal dump sites across the country.
Plastics, derived from fossil fuels, have been around for just over a century. The production and development of numerous new plastic products surged after World War II, making a world without plastics almost unimaginable today. Plastics have transformed medicine with life-saving devices, enabled space travel, lightened vehicles—thereby saving fuel and reducing pollution—and protected lives with helmets, incubators, and clean drinking water equipment.
However, the convenience of plastics has fostered a throw-away culture, exposing the material’s darker side: single-use plastics now make up 40 percent of the plastic produced annually. Many of these items, like plastic bags and food wrappers, are used for only minutes to hours but can persist in the environment for hundreds of years.
Some key facts:
However, the convenience of plastics has fostered a throw-away culture, exposing the material’s darker side: single-use plastics now make up 40 percent of the plastic produced annually. Many of these items, like plastic bags and food wrappers, are used for only minutes to hours but can persist in the environment for hundreds of years.