Clemelle Montallana 

College President

Abuyog Community College

“This is a story of our changing planet,

and what we can do to help it thrive…”-Sir Richard Attenborough

 As the year ends and another year slowly comes, it would be wise not  to look for what Santa brought  to us. It would be wise to  look into what the future offers .  Amidst the opening of economy and the ebbing down of Pandemic realities , it is imperative that we look into that often overlooked  pandemic of sorts, plastic pollution.

Marian Bigum , Circular Economy Specialist at Asian Development Bank wrote  “Plastics are a key global material and an important part of the global economy. However, plastics present considerable challenges, including high waste generation, low recycling rates, and climate gas emissions from production and waste disposal.

Greenhouse gas emissions from plastics are rising not only because of increased consumption but also because plastic waste is incinerated, releasing the embedded carbon to the atmosphere in the process. The Center for International Environmental Law found that given the present trajectory, plastic alone could consume 10%–13% of the 2˚C scenario global carbon budget in 2050. The Global Plastics Outlook: Economic Drivers, Environmental Impacts and Policy Options (Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, 2022) estimates around 460 million tonnes of plastic waste were generated in 2019, corresponding to 1,800 million tonnes of CO2-equivalent.

The United Nations Environment Programme said it more straightforwardly “While plastic has many valuable uses, we have become addicted to single-use plastic products — with severe environmental, social, economic and health consequences.

Around the world, one million plastic bottles are purchased every minute, while up to five trillion plastic bags are used worldwide every year. In total, half of all plastic produced is designed for single-use purposes – used just once and then thrown away.

Plastics including microplastics are now ubiquitous in our natural environment. They are becoming part of the Earth’s fossil record and a marker of the Anthropocene, our current geological era. They have even given their name to a new marine microbial habitat called the “plastisphere”.

The worrying effect  would be this , in the long run the world will choke  and natural flow and water circulation will be hampered and that the same could create problems of Earth’s Homeostatic  and  systemic well being . In layman terms , the Earth’s arteries and veins are clogged by the arteries and plastics are the cholesterol that hampers systemic functioning . That given the nearly indestructible  state that they are , the fight is ardous as it is nearly impossible to win.

As the new year comes , lets all be reminded that every time we wantonly throw plastics  in single use or other forms we are contributing to the demise of the planet . Yes, it would not come soon but our children and the next generation of Earthlings  would curse our generation of plastic addicts .

Let this be our crucial reminder , the Earth is choking in plastics . We can cover our nose for a minute or two  and we shall know how bad it is !