Packaging waste, which includes single-use disposables such as plastic bags and food packaging represent about one-third of the total waste disposed of by households in a city like Singapore.
These disposables unnecessarily contribute to fuel ill-adapted waste management cycles and result in avoidable greenhouse gas emissions (GHG), air pollution issues, and even in real political issues as evidenced by the recent regulatory enforcement on plastic imports in China and Southeast Asia.
But poor waste management isn’t even the real issue. The overuse of plastics exacerbated by economic growth is also directly linked to climate change through its value chain (oil extraction, refinery, manufacturing process and transport). Since 1967, global plastics production increased 3x faster than the world’s GDP . Projections estimate that the plastics industry could account for 20% of total oil & gas consumption by 2050, which is equivalent to 15% of global annual GHG by 2050.
Moreover, the plastic pollution of our oceans is a critical global challenge that is finally getting international attention. Beyond dirty beaches all over Asia, the realization that microplastics have been invisibly entering our food chains have made citizens more sensitized to a problem that is impacting their health directly.