Predicted growth in plastic waste exceeds efforts to mitigate plastic pollution

Stephanie B. Borrelle(University of Georgia), Jeremy Ringma(University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa), Kara Lavender Law(Sea Education Association), Cole C. Monnahan(National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration), Laurent Lebreton(The Ocean Cleanup), Alexis McGivern(University of Oxford), Erin L. Murphy(Arizona State University), Jenna Jambeck(University of Georgia), George H. Leonard(Ocean Conservancy), Michelle A. Hilleary(Virginia Tech), Marcus Eriksen, Hugh P. Possingham(The Nature Conservancy), Hannah De Frond(University of Toronto), Leah R. Gerber(Arizona State University), Beth Polidoro(Maricopa Community Colleges - Glendale Community College), Akbar Tahir(Hasanuddin University), Miranda Bernard(Arizona State University), Nicholas J. Mallos(Ocean Conservancy), Megan Barnes(University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa), Chelsea M. Rochman(University of Toronto)
Science
September 17, 2020
Cited by 2,977Open Access
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Abstract

Plastic pollution is a planetary threat, affecting nearly every marine and freshwater ecosystem globally. In response, multilevel mitigation strategies are being adopted but with a lack of quantitative assessment of how such strategies reduce plastic emissions. We assessed the impact of three broad management strategies, plastic waste reduction, waste management, and environmental recovery, at different levels of effort to estimate plastic emissions to 2030 for 173 countries. We estimate that 19 to 23 million metric tons, or 11%, of plastic waste generated globally in 2016 entered aquatic ecosystems. Considering the ambitious commitments currently set by governments, annual emissions may reach up to 53 million metric tons per year by 2030. To reduce emissions to a level well below this prediction, extraordinary efforts to transform the global plastics economy are needed.


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