{"id":130607,"date":"2019-04-08T12:00:05","date_gmt":"2019-04-08T11:00:05","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/?p=130607"},"modified":"2019-04-15T11:46:37","modified_gmt":"2019-04-15T10:46:37","slug":"the-toxic-consequences-of-americas-plastics-boom","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/2019\/04\/the-toxic-consequences-of-americas-plastics-boom\/","title":{"rendered":"The Toxic Consequences of America\u2019s Plastics Boom"},"content":{"rendered":"<blockquote><p><em>Thanks to fracking, petrochemicals giants are poised to make the plastic pollution crisis much, much worse.<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p><em>14 Mar 2019 &#8211; <\/em>A beach at sunset. The sky is streaked peach and mauve, the wind cool and briny. A long line of dump trucks idles at the edge of the waves, each full of plastic\u2014bags and milk jugs and floss containers, hair clips, shrink wrap, fake ferns, toys, and spatulas. Every minute, one of the trucks lifts its bed and deposits a load of trash into the sea.<\/p>\n<p>The dump trucks aren\u2019t real, but the trash is. No one knows exactly how much plastic leaks into the oceans every year, but one dump truck per minute\u20148 million tons per year\u2014is a midrange estimate. Plastic waste usually begins its journey on land, where <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/news.nationalgeographic.com\/2017\/07\/plastic-produced-recycling-waste-ocean-trash-debris-environment\/\" >only 9 percent of it is recycled<\/a>. The rest is thrown away, burned, or buried, left to wash into streams and rivers or to blow out to sea. Once in the ocean, the plastic drifts or sinks. The sun and the waves break it down into tiny particles that resemble plankton. Birds and fish and other sea creatures eat it and begin to starve. <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.ellenmacarthurfoundation.org\/assets\/downloads\/EllenMacArthurFoundation_TheNewPlasticsEconomy_Pages.pdf\" >One analysis predicts that by 2050, the plastic in the oceans will outweigh the fish<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>Some of the trash winds up in one of five current systems in the oceans known as gyres, where it forms a slowly circulating plastic soup. The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is the largest of these zones, spanning an area twice the size of Texas between Hawaii and California, a merry-go-round of the remains of global consumption. Researchers have found small plastic shards and large objects in the gyre: hard hats and Game Boys and milk crates and enormous tangles of fishing nets, all swirling in a smog of microplastics.<\/p>\n<p>Often inaccurately described as a solid island, the garbage patch has become a potent symbol of the world\u2019s plastic problem, alongside viral photos of a sea horse clutching a Q-tip, a sea turtle with a straw wedged deep in its nostril, and a dead adolescent albatross with a stomach full of jewel-like plastic shards. These images have helped raise the alarm about plastic waste around the world, inspiring responses ranging from weekend beach sweeps to the Ocean Cleanup, a controversial and expensive effort to collect the trash in the Great Pacific gyre. Even the corporations that produce plastics have grown alarmed. In January, dozens of companies including Dow, ExxonMobil, Chevron Phillips, and Formosa Plastics Corporation announced the Alliance to End Plastic Waste, with an initial commitment of $1 billion to fund recycling and cleanup.<\/p>\n<p>But those same petrochemical giants are about to make the plastic problem worse. Companies are investing $65 billion to dramatically expand plastics production in the United States, and more than 333 petrochemical projects are underway or newly completed, including brand-new facilities, expansions of existing plants, vast networks of pipelines, and shipping infrastructure. This is a sharp reversal of fortune for American plastics manufacturers. Just over a decade ago, major plastics makers shed tens of thousands of jobs as cheaper operating costs in Asia and the Middle East lured production overseas. Now, thanks to the fracking revolution, producing plastic has become radically cheaper in the United States, leading to a glut of raw materials for its creation. The economic winds have shifted so profoundly that petrochemical companies have declared a <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.americanchemistry.com\/Media\/PressReleasesTranscripts\/ACC-news-releases\/Shale-Gas-Creating-Renaissance-in-US-Plastics-Manufacturing.html\" >\u201crenaissance\u201d<\/a> in American plastics manufacturing. In turn, plastic is becoming an increasingly important source of profit for Big Oil, providing yet another reason to drill in the face of climate change.<\/p>\n<p>The expected result of all this investment is a spike in the amount of plastic produced globally, as manufacturers in Asia and the Middle East ramp up their own production\u2014with capacity increasing by more than a third in the next six years alone, according to an estimate from the Center for International Environmental Law (CIEL). Most of this new plastic will be sent to developing countries with waste infrastructure ill-equipped to handle it. \u201cIf you\u2019re going to increase production of plastics\u2014double it in the next 15 years\u2014you\u2019re going to see an increase of unrecyclable plastic products and packaging going to the more remote parts of the world, where there is still no plan for efficient recovery,\u201d said Marcus Eriksen, a scientist and former Marine who co-founded the 5 Gyres Institute. Against this backdrop, investing $1 billion in trash collection is like trying to empty a bathtub with a teaspoon while the tap is on full blast.<\/p>\n<p>But plastic\u2014and its fossil-fuel precursors\u2014leaves a mark long before bags and bottles and Q-tips scatter across fields or wash into the oceans. Communities all along the supply chain will feel the impacts of the American plastics renaissance. What the industry describes as a bright new economic opportunity, others see as a looming disaster. \u201cFor too long, one of the most invisible aspects of the plastics crisis has been the impacts of plastics on communities who live in the shadows and along the fence line of plastics refining and manufacturing,\u201d said Carroll Muffett, CIEL\u2019s president and CEO. \u201cThese people are experiencing the impacts of our plastic planet in a way that is more immediate and more severe than just about anybody else in the world.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>In the United States, the front of the plastics boom runs along the Gulf Coast from Texas to Louisiana, and through the upper Ohio River Valley, which spans Ohio, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia. It\u2019s made up of small communities that often had little say in their role in the new infrastructure build-out, with decisions made largely behind the scenes by politicians and corporate behemoths. Until recently, many people had no idea that their towns would soon become the knots connecting an immense plastic net thrown across the country.<\/p>\n<p>In May 2017, Donald Trump made his first overseas trip as president, to Saudi Arabia. He waved a sword during a ceremonial dance, <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.thedailybeast.com\/the-insane-gifts-saudi-arabia-gave-president-trump\" >accepted lavish gifts<\/a>\u2014including a portrait of himself and a robe lined with white tiger fur\u2014and signed a $110 billion arms agreement. Meanwhile, in a mint-and-gold-colored room within the Saudi royal court, executives struck their own deals. Among them were Darren Woods, the CEO and chairman of ExxonMobil, and Yousef Al-Benyan, CEO of the Saudi Basic Industries Corporation (SABIC), one of the world\u2019s largest producers of petrochemicals. With Trump, Saudi King Salman, and then\u2013US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson (a former Exxon CEO) looking on, Woods and Al-Benyan <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/twitter.com\/Spa_Eng\/status\/865999513294712836\/\" >shook hands<\/a> on a joint venture to build what will be the largest plastics facility of its kind, on Texas\u2019s Gulf Coast.<\/p>\n<p>Long before the deal was immortalized with glitzy photo ops, it was known as Project Yosemite\u2014a code name designed to keep the initiative secret while its backers scouted sites. What the two companies wanted to build is known as a \u201ccracker,\u201d a facility that uses heat and pressure to crack apart molecules of ethane gas so they can be reconfigured as ethylene and later polyethylene, the building block for a wide range of plastic products, from packaging to bottles. Once an unwanted by-product of oil and gas fracking, ethane flowing from Texas\u2019s Permian Basin and Eagle Ford Shale is now prompting a massive build-out of petrochemical infrastructure\u2014pipelines, crackers, polyethylene plants, tanker terminals\u2014along the Gulf Coast from St. James, Louisiana, to Corpus Christi, Texas.<\/p>\n<p>In 2016, with help from Texas Governor Greg Abbott, <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.apnews.com\/33b793fd18324d43a380c0d07b85a0c2\" >Exxon found a site for Project Yosemite<\/a> on 1,400 acres of farmland north of Corpus Christi. By the time residents of two neighboring towns learned of the massive project, county commissioners had already rezoned the farmland and were eagerly courting the oil giant. Soon Exxon was seeking $1 billion in tax breaks from the county and local school district. \u201cThat\u2019s when people woke up,\u201d said Errol Summerlin, a retired Legal Aid attorney who lives a few miles from the Exxon site, in the town of Portland. \u201cBingo. We started the battle then.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>A trim man with slightly stooped shoulders and a gravelly voice, Summerlin has lived in the same single-story white-brick house in Portland for 34 years. When I met him there in early January, he laid out a large map across his glass-topped dining table. With his finger, he traced the outline of Copano and Aransas bays to the north, where briny waters provide habitat to shrimp and oysters, redfish and black drum, roseate spoonbills and whooping cranes, and where billions of gallons of wastewater from the cracker will discharge. He pointed to an industrial corridor established in recent years on the north side of Corpus Christi Bay, where the flare from a natural-gas plant flickers incessantly. \u201cThat\u2019s Cheniere. You\u2019ve got Sherwin Alumina, you\u2019ve got Oxychem, Flint Hills\u2026,\u201d he said, ticking off various industrial sites. Across the water, a narrow shipping channel runs like a vein along Refinery Row, a corridor of round white storage tanks and towers that puff out columns of white and gray fumes.<\/p>\n<p>When Summerlin learned that hundreds of acres of farmland would be turned into an entirely new industrial zone for the cracker plant, he was disturbed. \u201cIndustry has been inching itself closer and closer to Portland,\u201d he explained. Plotted on a map, the rectangle of land where Exxon plans to build is nearly as large as Portland and about twice the size of neighboring Gregory, a low-income, largely Hispanic community. While county officials and members of local business groups boasted of some 600 permanent jobs promised by Exxon, Summerlin worried about air and water pollution from the plant. According to Exxon\u2019s requested air permit, the facility will emit sulfur dioxide, volatile organic compounds, and nitrogen oxides, which can combine to form ozone smog; carcinogens, including benzene, formaldehyde, and butadiene; and other particulate matter. The health risks of these emissions include eye and throat irritation, respiratory problems, and headaches, as well as nose bleeds at low levels and, at high levels, more serious damage to vital organs and the central nervous system.<\/p>\n<p>In late 2016, Summerlin and other concerned residents joined a newly formed group called <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"http:\/\/portlandcitizensunited.com\/\" >Portland Citizens United<\/a>, which sought initially to collect information about the proposed plant and later to try to stop the project, or at least convince Exxon to relocate to an area already given over to heavy industry. First they challenged the rezoning, which had been done in violation of open-meeting laws. That set the project back a few months. The Portland City Council unanimously adopted a resolution opposing the site, on the grounds that it was too close to public schools\u2014but because the site lies just outside city limits in unincorporated San Patricio County, the resolution amounted to a toothless plea. Now, the Texas Campaign for the Environment and the Sierra Club, working on behalf of Portland and Gregory residents, are contesting the air-quality permits that Exxon requested from the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. Summerlin is not naive about the prospects of this effort: The commission is notoriously friendly to industry and, as far as Summerlin knows, has never denied a permit\u2014certainly not to Exxon, one of the largest employers in the state. Nevertheless, Summerlin said, \u201cI\u2019m doing my best to slow the suckers down.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>We got into Summerlin\u2019s car and drove through Portland\u2019s sleepy neighborhoods, past the high school and middle school, then hooked a left on the straight, flat road that runs next to the site. Once planted with cotton and sorghum, the plot is a weedy brown rectangle two miles long and a mile wide, ringed by a tall wire fence and newly installed power lines. Summerlin drove slowly along the fence line, pointing to the outflow ditches where stormwater will be flushed out to the bays. In the fields stretching out to the north and east, a fleet of windmills stood at attention, arms spinning lazily. We passed a small pasture of Texas longhorns, which raised their heads to look at the car. Sandwiched between houses, with industrial smokestacks looming on the horizon, the cattle appeared lost. Further down the road, limp plastic bags dotted a fallow field of brown stalks like giant tufts of wet cotton.<\/p>\n<p>As Summerlin learned more about the facility, he grew increasingly alarmed by its scale and started to feel like the community had been misled. In addition to the steam cracker, which will produce 1.8 million tons of ethylene every year, Exxon and SABIC are building three units to make polyethylene and monoethylene glycol\u2014which can be turned into antifreeze, latex paints, and polyester for clothing\u2014as well as a rail yard where plastic pellets will be loaded onto trains bound for ocean ports and then shipped to Asia and Latin America. The facility needs a new road to transport components to build the plant, as well as a cargo dock and marine terminal. \u201cThey\u2019re all lauding this as a game changer\u2014and it is, in a bad way,\u201d Summerlin said. \u201cIt transforms the whole area.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Such infrastructure is just a small part of what oil and gas companies have planned for the Gulf Coast. Across Texas in recent years, <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.texastribune.org\/2018\/11\/29\/oil-and-gas-surge-texas-coastline-triggers-building-boom-tensions\/\" >more than 8,000 miles of pipeline have been laid down<\/a> to carry oil, gas, and natural-gas liquids (which include ethane) from the Permian Basin and the Eagle Ford Shale to the coast, where dozens of new petrochemical projects are in the works. Exxon alone is planning to spend some $20 billion over a decade on its \u201cGrowing the Gulf\u201d venture, a suite of petrochemical projects that includes the cracker outside Portland; another cracker at the company\u2019s chemicals complex in Baytown, near Houston; and an expansion of its plastics plant in nearby Beaumont. Other development is being driven by Congress\u2019s lifting, in 2015, of 40-year-old restrictions on crude-oil exports. With oil and natural-gas production surging, companies are eager to get their products overseas. Recently, the Port of Corpus Christi put forward <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.texastribune.org\/2018\/11\/29\/oil-and-gas-surge-texas-coastline-triggers-building-boom-tensions\/\" >plans to build new terminals for massive oil tankers<\/a>, which raised hackles in Port Aransas, a beach town close to the proposed site that depends on tourism and fishing, both of which could be disrupted by ships nearly the length of four football fields coming and going.<\/p>\n<p>All of these new facilities will require water; Exxon\u2019s cracker alone will consume 20 to 25 million gallons per day, more than all the water currently used each day in San Patricio County\u2019s water district. But the area is prone to drought. The Port of Corpus Christi has plans to build a seawater-desalination plant on Harbor Island near Port Aransas, which could lead to discharges of extremely salty water back into the bays that serve as nurseries for shrimp and fish. The development is also vulnerable to hurricanes. When Hurricane Harvey swept across Houston in 2017, many chemical plants shut down, <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.washingtonpost.com\/amphtml\/news\/energy-environment\/wp\/2017\/09\/04\/chemical-companies-have-already-released-1-million-pounds-of-extra-air-pollutants-thanks-to-harvey\/\" >releasing an estimated 1 million pounds of excess toxic emissions<\/a> that drifted into neighboring communities.<\/p>\n<p>But with little resistance from regulators, companies are plowing ahead with new development. Recently, the Port of Corpus Christi purchased 3,000 acres to the west of Portland, which Summerlin expects will be leased for other petrochemical projects. \u201cWe know what\u2019s going on,\u201d he said, \u201cbut nobody\u2019s telling us.\u201d A recent planning document showing the port\u2019s new tract of land listed code names for two new undisclosed proposals: Projects Falcon and Dynamo.<\/p>\n<p>About 80 miles up the coast from Portland in Point Comfort, tiny translucent pellets the size of lentils burrow into the muck and weeds at the edge of a sluggish creek. Further out, the pellets mingle with aquatic plants, floating together in whorls like confetti. Oystermen and anglers working in bays nearby find them inside oyster shells and in the guts of fish.<\/p>\n<p>Diane Wilson has been collecting these pellets for years. The \u201cnurdles,\u201d as they\u2019re often called, have taken over her barn, which is stacked with bags of them, and 30 years of her life. A former commercial shrimper, Wilson is locked in a protracted battle against the source of the pellets: Formosa Plastics, a Taiwanese company that manufactures polypropylene, PVC, and other petrochemicals at a 2,500-acre complex along Cox Creek. In 1994, Wilson tried to sink her shrimp boat in a nearby bay to protest the chemical-laden wastewater discharges from the plant. Almost daily over the past four years, she and a handful of volunteers, some of them former Formosa employees, have gone out in kayaks and waders to collect evidence of the ongoing pollution. Although the US Environmental Protection Agency and the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality have <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.texasobserver.org\/millions-of-plastic-pellets-in-lavaca-bay-formosa-says-its-just-trace-amounts\/\" >fined Formosa repeatedly<\/a> for various air- and water-quality violations, the nurdles continue to wash into the creek. Wilson is currently suing Formosa, asking a federal judge to fine the company $173 million and order an end to the dumping.<\/p>\n<p>In Louisiana\u2019s St. James Parish, a majority-black community that spans the Mississippi River west of New Orleans, Formosa\u2019s plans to build a $9.4 billion plastics complex have drawn outrage from residents already hemmed in by dozens of chemical facilities and refineries. Cotton, sugar, and indigo plantations once lined the river; more recently, <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.theadvocate.com\/baton_rouge\/opinion\/letters\/article_92cd8ba6-f7ef-11e8-b629-6f62a4f37360.html\" >lifetime resident Sharon Lavigne remembers<\/a>, her grandfather caught shrimp in the Mississippi River and picked figs and pecans from the trees in their yard. Now, St. James hosts more than a dozen industrial sites\u2014part of a corridor stretching from Baton Rouge to New Orleans that is often referred to as \u201cCancer Alley.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Formerly designated for agricultural uses, the land for Formosa\u2019s new plant\u2014which sits in a district that is <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/statisticalatlas.com\/county-subdivision\/Louisiana\/St-James-Parish\/St-James-District-5\/Race-and-Ethnicity\" >more than 85 percent black<\/a>\u2014was redesignated as a \u201cfuture industrial\u201d zone in <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"http:\/\/www.scpdc.org\/wp-content\/uploads\/St_James_Comp_Plan_2031_web.pdf\" >a planning document<\/a> published in 2014, a decision that residents and environmental groups say was made with inadequate community input. A section of the planning document focused on the parish\u2019s history quotes a 1950s-era historical account that describes the early 1800s in St. James as an \u201cera of fabulous plantation life\u201d and \u201cluxurious living,\u201d during which \u201cacreage was counted by thousands and slaves by hundreds.\u201d Aside from demographic figures, that is the report\u2019s sole mention of the area\u2019s black communities. Anne Rolfes, founding director of the environmental-justice group Louisiana Bucket Brigade, called the planned development in the area one of \u201cthe most disgusting racial situations I\u2019ve ever seen.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Like many St. James residents, Lavigne can list a number of friends and relatives who have died from cancer or been sickened by respiratory conditions. After she learned about Formosa\u2019s plans to build yet another facility, Lavigne, a teacher who lives about a mile and a half from the proposed site, started a group called RISE St. James. At first, it consisted of 10 people meeting at her house. The group has since grown to a few dozen; they\u2019ve held marches and shown up at public meetings to oppose Formosa and other plants. \u201cWe go to the meetings, we express our concerns, and people just look at us as though we\u2019re nothing,\u201d Lavigne told me. In December, <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.desmogblog.com\/2018\/12\/13\/formosa-plastics-plant-st-james-parish-louisiana-environmental-racism\" >activist Cherri Foytlin brought a permit hearing for the facility to a standstill<\/a> when she told government officials, \u201cYou don\u2019t give a shit about brown and black people.\u201d A single mother of three who lives in St. James Parish because she can\u2019t afford a home closer to New Orleans told regulators, \u201cI feel like I\u2019m trapped. I feel like I don\u2019t have anywhere to go. I can\u2019t get away from the pollution. I\u2019m surrounded by it.\u201d Two months later,<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.biologicaldiversity.org\/news\/press_releases\/2019\/formosa-plastics-plant-02-01-2019.php\" > the state approved one of Formosa\u2019s critical permits<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>For a long time, communities like St. James and people like Diane Wilson fought lonely battles against the petrochemical industry. The Break Free From Plastic movement, a coalition of more than 1,400 organizations, is working to connect these various localized struggles, from communities in West Texas impacted by fracking to neighborhoods in the Philippines that are awash in plastic trash. Carroll Muffett of CIEL, which is a member of the coalition, said, \u201cThey realize they\u2019re all fighting different aspects of the same industry and the same problem.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The story that the petrochemical industry tells about its products is not about pollution. It\u2019s a story of an innovation-driven manufacturing comeback, one that will create jobs at home and provide essential products to meet a growing demand overseas. \u201cWe are using new, abundant domestic-energy supplies to provide advantaged products to the world,\u201d Exxon CEO <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/corporate.exxonmobil.com\/en\/News\/Newsroom\/Speeches\/2017\/0306_CERA-week-keynote-speech\" >Darren Woods said at a 2017 energy conference<\/a> regarding the company\u2019s planned $20 billion investment in petrochemical infrastructure along the Gulf Coast. \u201cThe advent of plastics has benefited the world,\u201d Graham van\u2019t Hoff, executive vice president of Shell\u2019s chemicals division, wrote in January. Solar panels, wind turbines, and electric vehicles all use plastic components, he continued. The plastic products that account for the bulk of rising demand in developing countries, however, are not life-saving medical devices or specialized vehicle components. They aren\u2019t even really products in their own right. According to <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.connaissancedesenergies.org\/sites\/default\/files\/pdf-actualites\/the_future_of_petrochemicals.pdf\" >the International Energy Agency<\/a>, \u201cthe single largest source of plastic demand\u201d is packaging\u2014the shrink-wrapping around a box of mushrooms, the tiny sachets containing a single wash of shampoo\u2014much of it thrown away as soon as it is removed. This has historically been the plastic industry\u2019s profit model: \u201cThe future of plastics is in the trash can,\u201d Lloyd Stouffer, the editor of the trade journal <em>Modern Packaging<\/em>, declared in 1956. Now, according to <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.ellenmacarthurfoundation.org\/assets\/downloads\/EllenMacArthurFoundation_TheNewPlasticsEconomy_Pages.pdf\" >the Ellen MacArthur Foundation<\/a>, about a third of packaging ends up as trash. The environmental damage it causes and the greenhouse gases emitted during its production together cost some $40 billion annually\u2014\u201cexceeding the profit pool of the plastic packaging industry.\u201d The petrochemical industry sees this largely as the fault of waste-collection systems in poor countries. \u201cI find the issue of unmanaged plastic waste deeply concerning,\u201d van\u2019t Hoff wrote in January. But, he added, \u201cThe challenge is not with plastics themselves. It is what happens after people use them. In some places, waste and recycling infrastructure is inadequate\u2026. As a producer of petrochemicals and plastic resin, we cannot directly control the amount of plastic waste that gets into [the] environment.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Plastics producers have responded to growing public pressure by offering some support for cleanup efforts. \u201cWe believe we have a role in fixing it,\u201d said Steve Russell, vice president of plastics for the American Chemistry Council, which represents petrochemical companies, speaking of the plastic-waste crisis; he added that current funds for the industry\u2019s Alliance to End Plastic Waste are \u201ca start point.\u201d But many environmental advocates see these efforts as greenwashing. Marcus Eriksen of the 5 Gyres Institute said that many of the solutions put forward by the industry require costly technology that will take years\u2014if not decades\u2014to scale. \u201cThey\u2019ve been very effective in making the public think that recycling is key, and that it\u2019s the burden of the citizen, of the community, of the government to manage waste,\u201d Eriksen continued. \u201cGlobalization is still going to send unrecyclable materials to more remote parts of the world that can\u2019t employ the solutions that industry proposes, because they\u2019re expensive.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Environmental groups like those in the Break Free From Plastic movement are increasingly calling for a prevention-focused strategy, in which companies stop making materials designed to be used only once and pay the full cost of collecting and recycling plastic products. NGOs, academics, even the corporate consulting group McKinsey have embraced the concept of a \u201ccircular\u201d plastics economy, in which products flow through a closed loop rather than \u201cleaking\u201d out. The circular model depends on improving the economics and technology of recycling and on fundamentally redesigning materials to replace single-use plastics with biodegradable or recyclable alternatives. A true circular model also requires reducing and eventually eliminating the amount of plastics created from fossil fuels\u2014by developing alternative feedstocks from renewable sources, and by supplanting virgin feedstocks with recycled content.<\/p>\n<p>Running in the opposite direction are the major oil companies, who have placed big bets on their role as plastics producers. For oil giants like Exxon and Shell, plastics and other chemicals represent an increasingly significant source of profit\u2014one that a circular-economy approach would threaten. \u201cWhile increased recycling of plastics represents a gain in circular-economy terms, it is less good news for oil-resource-holding countries and oil companies, which will lose part of a source of future demand growth,\u201d McKinsey analysts wrote recently. According to the International Energy Agency, \u201cpetrochemicals are rapidly becoming the largest driver of global oil consumption,\u201d picking up the slack as efforts to curb emissions and increase efficiency limit other sources of demand. In 2015, while only 10 percent of Exxon\u2019s revenue came from its chemicals division, chemicals accounted for more than a quarter of its profits.<\/p>\n<p>As climate change forces a reckoning with fossil-fuel consumption, plastics offer another incentive to keep drilling. \u201cInvesting in chemicals is part of our strategy to thrive through the energy transition,\u201d wrote Shell\u2019s van\u2019t Hoff. The billions invested in new petrochemical infrastructure and local markets for ethane could help keep shale drillers\u2014many of whom have been bleeding money\u2014afloat. (According to the US Energy Information Administration, the high content of ethane and other natural-gas liquids in \u201cmany shale plays has made it economical for operators to continue to aggressively develop\u2026shale gas resources during periods of low natural gas prices.\u201d) The boom in plastics \u201cwill perpetuate a fossil fuel economy that underpins both the climate crisis and the plastics crisis,\u201d concludes a 2017 CIEL report, \u201cwhile impacting frontline communities and the wider public at every stage of its toxic lifecycle.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Early one morning last September, a gas pipeline near Terrie Baumgardner\u2019s home in western Pennsylvania exploded, turning the sky the color of dirty orange sherbet. Flames shot 150 feet into the air, destroying a house and sending several families scrambling to evacuate. Driving down the interstate days later, Baumgardner could make out a patch of scorched earth where the gas had burned itself out.<\/p>\n<p>Two days later, officials in the nearby township of Independence voted to repeal a rule mandating that pipelines be built at least 100 feet away from homes and 500 feet from parks, schools, and hospitals. Eliminating the ordinance eased the way for the Falcon Pipeline, a 97-mile project that will carry ethane from the Marcellus Shale to a new cracker being built by Shell on the banks of the Ohio River in Beaver County. To Baumgardner, a retired college instructor and member of a local nonprofit called the Beaver County Marcellus Awareness Community, the elimination of the pipeline-setback rule was yet another example of state and local officials\u2019 rush to accommodate Shell.<\/p>\n<p>The cracker, slated to start operating in late 2021 or early 2022, will be the first to open outside the Gulf Coast in decades. But it\u2019s just one of several projects underway in the Ohio River Valley as corporations, state officials, and members of the Trump administration look to transform the region into a brand-new petrochemical corridor. A Thai company has proposed a cracker farther down the Ohio River in Belmont County, Ohio, and the industry and its political allies want to build a massive storage hub to hold as much as 100 million barrels of ethane and other natural-gas liquids beneath West Virginia, and possibly Pennsylvania and Ohio as well. The US Department of Energy is considering a $1.9 billion loan for that project, which Energy Secretary Rick Perry has described as a \u201conce-in-a-lifetime opportunity for this country.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>To many people in northern Appalachia, petrochemicals look like the answer to the economic problems created by the collapse of steel and coal. Shell has helped drive that narrative, <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/pittsburghquarterly.com\/between-the-issues\/item\/1449-what-will-shell-cracker-bring-with-it.html\" >commissioning a study<\/a> that predicted the cracker would produce $15 to $19 billion in regional economic activity in southwestern Pennsylvania over four decades. Although some economists have disputed the methodology that produced this rosy projection\u2014for instance, it assumes that every job created at the plant will lead to 13 elsewhere, and omits the cost of a historic $1.65 billion tax break the state gave Shell\u2014it was welcome news in Potter Township, where Shell is building its facility: 500 jobs there vanished <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.timesonline.com\/2782ceee-2f6c-11e7-9a85-9b9032e9d5d7.html\" >when a zinc-smelting facility closed in 2014<\/a>, leaving hundreds of acres <a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.washingtontimes.com\/news\/2015\/sep\/23\/shell-to-spend-80m-to-remediate-potential-plant-si\/\" >contaminated<\/a> with lead and arsenic. Shell promised to clean up the site and pledged hundreds of thousands of dollars for local historic-preservation projects.<\/p>\n<p>But to others, including Baumgardner, whatever economic benefits the cracker provides are far outweighed by the risks of large-scale petrochemical development. Pennsylvania has a long history of damage related to extractive industries, from the Donora smog of 1948, when a poisonous air inversion killed 20 people and sent some 6,000 others to the hospital, to the fragmented disasters of fracking: toxic-waste ponds, ruined property values, lingering illnesses. \u201cThis area of the Ohio River Valley, and other areas that have had a lot of experience with resource extraction, they follow this boom-bust cycle. When you\u2019re in a bust phase and you lose jobs, there\u2019s a lot of momentum: \u2018Well, we need to attract industry to bring these jobs back,\u2019\u201d said Jennifer Baka, an energy geographer at Penn State. \u201cWe can\u2019t think outside of the box and think about what an alternative-energy future might be, because we\u2019re so familiar and accustomed to the existing fossil-fuel economy.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Southwestern Pennsylvania suffers from some of the poorest air quality in the nation, according to Matthew Mehalik, the executive director of the Breathe Project, which works on air-pollution issues. \u201cIf you consider that backdrop\u2014[that we] already have a serious air-quality problem\u2014the potential to add more burden to our airshed will only make things worse,\u201d he added. One estimate puts the health-care impacts over a 30-year period from the Shell plant and two other crackers proposed in the region at $616 million to $1.4 billion in Beaver County alone, and up to $8.1 billion nationally.<\/p>\n<p>Critics of the projects also argue that regulators and communities are unprepared for the scale of development that is now underway. Lisa Graves-Marcucci, the Pennsylvania coordinator for the Environmental Integrity Project, is particularly worried about what she describes as \u201cpiecemeal, egg-slicer\u201d permitting, in which projects like Shell\u2019s cracker are considered in isolation, obscuring the web of industrial infrastructure\u2014drilling sites, compressor stations, storage hubs, pipelines\u2014that goes along with them. Even some people in the industry have suggested that communities might not be fully aware of what\u2019s coming. \u201cI think the magnitude of some of these projects that we\u2019re talking about here is hard for a lot of us and a lot of our communities to wrap their heads around,\u201d said Chad Riley, the CEO of the Thrasher Group, an engineering firm with projects in oil and gas fields, speaking at an industry conference in 2018 that was attended by reporter Sharon Kelly.<\/p>\n<p>Ultimately, the fate of a facility that will affect the whole region was largely decided by three supervisors in tiny Potter Township, population 496. \u201cDecisions have been made at higher levels of government, or sometimes in these small communities\u2026that will forever change our region,\u201d Graves-Marcucci said. \u201cDoes that mean we\u2019ve signed over our entire future to this constant need to drill more and frack more? Are we stuck on this treadmill of plastics?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Pennsylvania\u2019s northeastern neighbor has taken a different approach. New York banned fracking in 2014 and, a year later, unveiled a clean-energy initiative that established some of the most aggressive energy-transition goals in the country. In 2018, Governor Andrew Cuomo announced a $1.5 billion investment in renewables projects across the state, with a goal of creating 40,000 clean-energy jobs by 2020.<\/p>\n<p>For a long time, Terrie Baumgardner didn\u2019t think much about what would come out of Shell\u2019s ethane cracker. Early on, she heard that the plant would produce plastic pellets, perhaps to fill stuffed animals. \u201cBut I don\u2019t think we realized at that point what a hazard plastic was for us and for the planet,\u201d she said. \u201cIt\u2019s only lately become a \u2018for what?\u2019 question\u2014why are we doing this?\u201d She continued: \u201cOur leaders said, \u2018Here comes an industry and it can get people jobs.\u2019 And it was a backward-looking industry, but they didn\u2019t see it that way.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>_______________________________________________<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><em>Zo\u00eb Carpenter is\u00a0<\/em>The Nation\u2019<em>s associate\u00a0Washington editor.<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p><a target=\"_blank\" href=\"https:\/\/www.thenation.com\/article\/plastics-pollution-crisis-fracking-petrochemicals\/\" >Go to Original \u2013 thenation.com<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Thanks to fracking, petrochemicals giants are poised to make the plastic pollution crisis much, much worse.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":4,"featured_media":115466,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[61,65],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-130607","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-environment","category-anglo-america"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/130607","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/4"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=130607"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/130607\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/115466"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=130607"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=130607"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.transcend.org\/tms\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=130607"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}