Facebook Suspends Environmental Groups: Have you wondered why we’re giving you news this way instead of daily on Facebook? Facebook recently made an announcement about being, “committed to tackling climate misinformation” and then immediately suspended the accounts of environmental groups who are actively working to protect people and communities against climate change. The timing on these account suspensions could not have been worse. In May of 2019 several environmental groups were involved in an action against KKR & Co. an investment firm that is financing the Coastal GasLink pipeline. There was another online action against KKR & Co. planned for this month, the same environmental groups from the 2019 action were suspended the day before the latest planned action. Facebook is still filled with pages refuting climate science, pages that promote violence, and still allows polluting corporations to publish their greenwashed stories about how they help people and are concerned about climate change. Read the entire story about Facebook suspending Environmental organization’s accounts here. The Stop Hate for Profit campaign was started to hold social media companies accountable for hate on their platforms. The campaign goal is straightforward- stop valuing profits over hate, bigotry, racism, antisemitism, and disinformation. Get all the news on Stop Hate for Profit here.
NYC Climate Week: On Monday we shared a story about BP’s personal “carbon footprint” campaign and after posting we read a quote from environmental reporter Emily Atkin, “I hope they noticed that British Petroleum would rather trigger climate despair in people who already care about the planet than examine their own responsibility”. This quote is especially pertinent right now because it is NYC Climate week. As part of Climate Week, major oil companies (including BP) have released their climate plans. Not a single one of these plans will keep global temperatures from reaching the 1.5° global warming limit. BP’s outlined plan is the most misleading because it leaves out the company’s partial ownership of Rosneft, a major Russian oil producer. Read the entire report about big oil’s climate plans here.
American Chemistry Council Greenwashing: Chemical recycling has been a hot button issue in Virginia for the last year, with a strong backing from the American Chemistry Council. If you remember, last year at the Virginia General Assembly, the House passed a phased ban on expanded polystyrene (Styrofoam) food and beverage containers. This bill was delayed by the Senate because if the products were banned, chemical recycling facilities would not come to Virginia. It’s important to note here there were never any plans for a chemical recycling facility in Virginia, and there are still no plans to build one. This is where BP comes back into the story, our elected officials are depending on fossil fuel companies like BP to build these facilities, of which BP is building one in Houston for $25 million. This investment from BP is to bolster their profits by continuing the myth that the world can recycle all of the plastic they are creating. The plastic “recycled” with chemical recycling is mostly repurposed into fuel stock or to burn for energy, all of this is released back into the environment. Expanding chemical recycling facilities does nothing to stop the plastic crisis and contributes to environmental degradation and harms the most vulnerable communities. The solution to the plastic crisis is reducing waste at the source rather than expensive, inefficient processes at the end of the system. Read the entire story about the American Chemistry Council’s greenwashing attempts here.
The Myth of Recycling: Recycling is definitely an important part of the plan to reduce waste and recover valuable materials, but our current system is broken. Plastic producers have no incentive to make a change because virgin material is cheaper than recycled plastic and recycled plastics can’t be used in the same manner repeatedly because plastics degrade everytime they are recycled. The plastics industry has acknowledged the global problem of plastic waste- their solution is chemical recycling, which as we know isn’t actually recycling, it’s just repurposing. Politico recently put out a great series titled, “The Recycling Myth” that has some great information about the problems with the global recycling system.
Break Free From Plastic Pollution Act: The problems we have highlighted have serious consequences, but there is a great solution to the plastic crisis in the US- The Break Free From Plastic Pollution Act (BFFPPA). This act would require plastic producers to take responsibility for collecting and recycling materials. Recycling programs around the country are collapsing because localities do not have the funding. This act would force corporations, like BP who had $9.7 billion in profit for FY 2019, to cover the costs of waste management and clean up, rather than leaving it to cash strapped localities and volunteers to remove waste once it enters their community. The BFFPPA would require a nationwide bottle deposit program. Currently Virginia has a bottle recycling rate of about 20%, the ten states with bottle bills have an average bottle recycling rate of 60%. The most common polluting single use plastics would be phased out of production. The collective “we” have spent over a decade fighting for single use plastic bag legislation in Virginia, and we are still only part way there, this act would mandate a nationwide fee on single use carryout plastic bags. A fee for plastic bags has documented success around the country. This federal legislation would also put a temporary pause on new plastics facilities, stopping the construction of new facilities is critical to reduce plastic waste at the source. The only elected officials from Virginia who have signed on are Representative Luria and Representative Connolly. Read about this important federal bill here!
Unnamed creek in Fairfax County. Photo credit Clean Fairfax.