Break the Chain
Mother Jones|March/April 2022
We’ve got a plastics problem. Will chemical recycling solve it?
By Tim Wogan. Illustration by Sébastian Thibault
Break the Chain

Every week, carefully sorted piles of plastic waste adorn curbsides across the country, waiting for pickup. It once went overseas, but now China and other former importers have banned or imposed prohibitive costs on shipments, having concluded there is little to do with the stuff. Cities have cut back collection schemes, leaving straws, bottles, utensils, and other detritus to pile up in warehouses or be disposed of as trash.

Those systems, in theory, created a destination for plastics aside from landfills, assuaging consumer guilt about using polluting—and practically indestructible—products. But as the bottom fell out of the international market, an inconvenient truth was highlighted: Most plastics are impervious to traditional recycling.

“Plastic only emerged as a mass-produced material in the 1950s,” says Roland Geyer, an industrial ecologist at the University of California, Santa Barbara. “What we built in terms of waste management systems— be it landfills, be it incinerators, be it curbside recycling systems—doesn’t really work well for plastic. That’s now come back to bite us.”

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