Sharks are cool and comfortable!


Elden Thing | Back & Body Hurts Platinugggggh Rewards Member


Profile pic and banner credits: sharkaeopteryx art by @superkiak! eggbug by eggbug! Mash-up by me!
[Alt-text for pfp: a cute sharkaeopteryx sat on the ground with legs out, wings down, jaw ajar, and hed empty, looking at eggbug and eggbug's enigmatic smile.]
[Alt-text for banner: a Spirit Halloween banner with eggbug and the sharkaeopteryx that Superkiak drew for me looking at it with inscrutable expressions]


I'm a Vietnamese cis woman born and currently living in the U.S. You may know me from Sandwich, from Twitter or Mastodon (same username), or on Twitch as Sharkaeopteryx. I do not have a Discord or Bluesky account.

Ask me about language learning/teaching, cooking/eating food, late diagnosis ADHD, and volunteer small business mentoring. Or don't, I'm not the boss of you.


I think people deserve to be young, make mistakes, and grow without being held to standards they don't know about yet and are still learning. So, if you are under 22, please don't try to strike up a friendship or get involved in discussions on my posts.


Please don't automatically assume I follow/know/co-sign someone just because I reposted something from them—sometimes I do, sometimes I don't. Also, if you think being removed as a follower when we're not mutuals is a cardinal sin, please do not follow me.


🐘Mastodon
search for @sharksonaplane@mastodon.sandwich.net and hit follow if you want
Hang out with me on the Auldnoir forum! (you can DM there!)
discourse.auldnoir.org/
Follow me on Twitch
twitch.tv/sharkaeopteryx
Add my RSS feed (not working yet but I'll get to it!)
sharkaeopteryx.neocities.org/rss.xml

trannyman
@trannyman
California’s new lawsuit alleges that ExxonMobil has known for decades that recycling would not effectively stem the flow of plastic waste. Despite that knowledge, the lawsuit says, the company actively promoted recycling as a viable solution to plastic pollution.

California has filed a first-of-its-kind lawsuit against ExxonMobil, alleging that the company has spent decades misleading the public about the efficacy of plastic recycling.

The lawsuit alleges that ExxonMobil has known for decades that recycling plastics was technically and economically challenging and would do little to stem the enormous volume of plastic waste that ends up in the environment. Despite that knowledge, the lawsuit says, the company promoted recycling as a viable option.

“For decades, ExxonMobil has been deceiving the public to convince us that plastic recycling could solve the plastic waste and pollution crisis when they clearly knew this wasn’t possible,” California Attorney General Rob Bonta said in a statement on Monday.

By misleading the public, the suit says, ExxonMobil encouraged the excessive use of plastic, which is produced from fossil fuels. In a press conference on Monday, Bonta said California spends over $1 billion each year to manage its plastic waste problems.

The brief filed by the California attorney general's office cited reporting by NPR that found the plastics industry promoted recycling even though its officials have long known that the activity would probably never be effective on a large scale.

In a statement to NPR, ExxonMobil spokesperson Lauren Kight replied, “advanced recycling works. To date, we’ve processed more than 60 million pounds of plastic waste into usable raw materials, keeping it out of landfills.” California handles more than 5 million tons—or 10 billion pounds—of plastic each year.

In the lawsuit, Bonta’s office is asking for the creation of an Exxon-funded “abatement” fund, which could be used to address ongoing plastic pollution issues by supporting efforts like cleanups or developing new ways to break down plastics. Bonta also suggested the fund could produce a “re-education” campaign to help consumers understand what plastics are—and, just as crucially, which are not recyclable.

Mark James, an environmental law expert at the Vermont Law and Graduate School, explains that the suit also calls for a substantial shift in communication from ExxonMobil. The suit, he says, calls for “the end of the deceptive statements that have misled” the public.

“The best way to phrase what [ExxonMobile has] been doing,” says James, is simple: the company has consistently promoted “the idea that a product is recyclable, but it really is not.”

The suit comes just a day after California Governor Gavin Newsom signed a law closing a loophole in the state’s plastic bag ban, which has been in place since 2014. The loophole led to an increase in the state’s single-use plastic bag waste.

A lawsuit long in the making

California Attorney General Rob Bonta said in 2022 that his office was launching an investigation of the fossil fuel and petrochemical industries for their alleged role in worsening plastic pollution, which his office described as a global crisis.

Former industry officials have said the goal was to avoid regulations and ensure that demand for plastics, which are made from fossil fuels, kept growing. Despite years of recycling campaigns, less than 10% of plastic waste gets recycled globally, and the amount of plastic waste that's dumped in the environment continues to soar.

“Big Oil and the plastic industry’s lies are the beating heart of the plastic waste crisis, which makes California’s groundbreaking lawsuit against ExxonMobil the most important legal action to date in the global fight against plastic pollution,” Richard Wiles, president of the Center for Climate Integrity, said in a statement.

The Center for Climate Integrity published a report in February that indicated the plastics industry championed recycling mainly for its public relations value, rather than as a tool for avoiding environmental damage. "We are committed to the activities, but not committed to the results," a vice president at Exxon Chemical said during a meeting in 1994 with staff for the American Plastics Council, a trade group, according to a document uncovered by the Center for Climate Integrity.

“The basic issue…” is money

One of the biggest challenges is that making new plastic is relatively cheap. But recycling generally costs as much as or more than the material is worth, a director of environmental solutions at B.F. Goodrich explained at another industry meeting in 1992. The "basic issue," he said, "is economics."

California filed its lawsuit against Exxon months before countries are scheduled to gather for a final round of negotiations to hammer out a global treaty to end plastic pollution. Environmental groups say the talks have been hampered by fossil-fuel producing countries, which have been blocking proposals to limit the production of new plastic. Researchers say production caps are essential to rein in plastic pollution.

Exxon has said the problem of plastic waste can be solved without cutting how much plastic society uses. Exxon is among a group of companies that have been investing in what the industry calls "advanced recycling" plants. The facilities are designed to turn plastic waste, including material that can't be processed through traditional mechanical recycling, into liquids and gasses that can then be used to make new plastics and other chemical products.

"Advanced recycling is a real, proven solution that can help address plastic waste and improve recycling rates," Exxon said in a statement earlier this year to NPR.

However, critics say the technology is ineffective and harmful to the environment and human health.

The economics of plastic recycling "haven't changed at all. Not at all. And if virgin [plastic] was always cheaper and of higher quality, that's still the case today," Wiles of the Center for Climate Integrity told NPR earlier this year.

Judith Enck, president of an advocacy group Beyond Plastic, called chemical recycling “another industry public relations stunt.”

In a statement, Enck called the California litigation “the single most consequential lawsuit filed against the plastics industry for its persistent and continued lying about plastics recycling.”


Source


You must log in to comment.