Challenging Big Oil’s Big Lie about Plastic Recycling

by MISSISSIPPI DIGITAL MAGAZINE


Challenging Big Oil’s Big Lie about Plastic Recycling

California’s lawsuit against Exxon is about ending the lie that most plastic is recyclable

Photograph shot looking up from inside a recycling bin as a person's hand is about to drop a plastic bottle into the opening

BrianAJackson/Getty Images

Among the plastic in your house might be an orange-colored hard laundry detergent bottle and a squeezable clear ketchup bottle. Come recycling day, you might put them on the curb in a blue bin or bag, expecting they will become something new.

But here’s the problem: those two plastic bottles cannot be recycled together because they are different colors, different plastic types and made from different chemicals. Unlike an old aluminum can that can be recycled into a new aluminum can, plastics are fundamentally not designed to be recycled.

Yet the idea that plastics are just as recyclable as aluminum is a pervasive misconception because the plastics and petrochemical industries have been drilling it into our brains for nearly half a century. This long con has allowed these industries to make billions of dollars with zero accountability—until recently, when California attorney general Rob Bonta announced that the state of California was suing ExxonMobil for environmental damage and recycling lies.


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This is a historic moment in the fight against plastic pollution, a crisis that has been created by companies that have known recycling was not possible for most plastics. While others have filed important suits against consumer brand companies for their pollution, like New York attorney general Letitia James’ lawsuit against PepsiCo, Bonta’s suit is the first to target a company for lying about plastic recycling’s efficacy.

Exxon, one of the largest oil and gas companies in the world, was an obvious company to focus on. Americans typically associate the company with gas stations, but Exxon also makes the polymers—the chains of repeating chemical pieces—that become plastic bottles, cups, utensils, takeout containers and other packaging for U.S. consumer goods. It considers the manufacturing of plastic components a “core” part of its business and, according to Bonta’s lawsuit, sees 80 percent of the company’s growth potential as “dependent on single-use plastics applications.”

Think about that: while you’re stressing about what to put in the recycling bin, companies like Exxon are on a mission to find new ways to pump unnecessary plastic into the world.

The composition of most plastic makes it an inherently unrecyclable material. More than 16,000 chemicals are used to make different plastics to give the material qualities like color and flexibility, with different types of plastic using different combinations of these additives. The small amount of plastic that is actually recyclable (primarily No. 1 and No. 2, PET and HDPE) is delivered to a facility where the plastic is shredded and ground. Unlike paper, which can be turned into new paper products several times, recycled plastic typically becomes plastic lumber or clothing—which then can no longer be recycled and does not biodegrade.

That’s why less than 6 percent of plastics are recycled in the U.S. and why it’s deceptive that Exxon and others have spent millions over decades on public relations campaigns that falsely promote plastic recycling’s ability to manage all of the mess.

According to the California attorney general, this is illegal. Bonta’s lawsuit extensively outlines the company’s deception and includes a statement from an Exxon employee from 1994 saying, “We are committed to the activities but not committed to the results,” when discussing plastic recycling projects.

This distraction technique was meant to shift the blame and responsibility for plastic pollution from companies to consumers while companies exponentially increased the amount of plastic being produced. And it worked. Today, there isn’t a place on Earth untouched by plastic. It’s been found in Arctic sea ice, the deepest part of the ocean, the remotest mountains, in much of our food, and in our bodies. Plastic doesn’t biodegrade; it breaks up into smaller pieces. This chokes wildlife, enters the air we breathe and finds its way into the water we drink. This toxic material, often used for just a moment, ends up polluting the environment for centuries.

Exxon and others are now reusing the same distraction technique to promote what they call “advanced recycling,” a process that uses high heat to turn plastic into small amounts of fuel or uses often toxic chemicals to attempt to make new plastics. Like mechanical recycling, it’s been unsuccessful for decades.

Today only nine chemical recycling facilities exist in the U.S., and even if they were operating at full capacity—which they are not—they would handle less than 1.2 percent of U.S. plastic waste. These facilities create a new universe of environmental problems, such as toxic contamination and air pollution, and they continue the hoax of plastics recycling. Most of these facilities are located in low-income communities and communities of color.

Bonta’s lawsuit will hold Exxon accountable for its disinformation around advanced recycling in addition to traditional recycling—another unprecedented and laudable move. “ExxonMobil has known that mechanical recycling, and now ‘advanced recycling,’ will never be able to process more than a tiny fraction of the waste it produces,” the lawsuit says.

This lawsuit stands on the shoulders of cases brought by state attorneys general against tobacco companies in the 1980s. It has two similar goals as the successful tobacco lawsuits: stop the deception and address the damages. When California wins this case, ExxonMobil and the trade associations it funds will have to stop lying about plastics recycling. Additionally, Exxon will be required to put millions of dollars into an abatement fund that will enable California to address the plague of plastic pollution.

Companies like Exxon have long used their power and money to evade consequences for the devastation fueled by their own greed. It takes leaders like Attorney General Bonta to change that.

This legal action sets a precedent for other state attorneys general to follow. As the litigation piles up on big oil for climate liability, smart companies can reduce their legal exposure by telling the truth about plastics and plastics recycling. It’s not only the right thing to do; it’s also what the law requires.

This is an opinion and analysis article, and the views expressed by the author or authors are not necessarily those of Scientific American.



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