The New Coal: Plastics and Climate Change

The New Coal: Plastics and Climate Change is a comprehensive account of the United States plastics industry’s significant, yet rarely acknowledged contributions to the climate crisis. Using coal-fired power plants as a benchmark, the report examines ten stages in the creation, usage, and disposal of plastics: fracking for plastics, transporting and processing fossil fuels, gas crackers, other plastics feedstock manufacturing, polymers and additives production, exports and imports, foamed plastic insulation, “chemical recycling”, municipal waste incineration, and plastics in the water.

As of 2020, the U.S. plastics industry is responsible for at least 232 million tons of CO2e gas emissions per year. This amount is equivalent to the average emissions from 116 average-sized (500-megawatt) coal-fired power plants.

The U.S. plastics industry’s contribution to climate change is on track to exceed that of coal-fired power in this country by 2030. At least 42 plastics facilities have opened since 2019, are under construction, or are in the permitting process. If they become fully operational, these new plastics plants could release an additional 55 million tons of greenhouse gases—the equivalent of another 27 average-sized coal plants. The health impacts of these emissions are disproportionately borne by low-income communities and communities of color, making this a major environmental justice issue. 

Plastics are the new coal.

Although the plastics industry has long touted plastic’s recyclability, in truth, less than 9% of plastics are recycled, and new proposals for “chemical recycling” or “advanced recycling” actually have more in common with incineration—a major source of both climate emissions and harmful air pollutants. Most of these facilities spend vast amounts of energy catalyzing chemical changes designed to turn plastics into more burnable fuel. The burning of plastics made in the U.S. already releases an estimated 15 million tons of greenhouse gases each year. If we turn to these processes to handle plastic waste, the emissions impacts would be even greater.

Please join us for a free Zoom webinar on November 11, 2021 from 7:00-8:00 PM ET US to dig into the findings of the report. Register now >>


ORGANIZING TOOLS & RESOURCES

Our hope is that this report will be used to raise awareness of the dangerous connection between plastics and climate change and to help advance solutions to this growing threat to our climate, our oceans, and our health, particularly for those in low-income communities and communities of color. To that end, we’ve put together some organizing tools and resources to help people and groups who are working to advance environmental justice and slow climate change.


TABLE OF CONTENTS:

  • SUMMARY OF FINDINGS

  • FOREWORD

  • Section 1. FRACKING FOR PLASTICS

  • Section 2. TRANSPORTING AND PROCESSING FRACKED GASES

  • Section 3. ETHANE GAS CRACKERS

  • Section 4. OTHER PLASTICS FEEDSTOCK MANUFACTURING

  • Section 5. POLYMERS AND ADDITIVES PRODUCTION

  • Section 6. EXPORTS AND IMPORTS

  • Section 7. FOAMED PLASTIC INSULATION

  • Section 8. “CHEMICAL RECYCLING”

  • Section 9. MUNICIPAL WASTE INCINERATION

  • Section10. PLASTIC IN THE WATER

  • END NOTES


APPENDICES:

 APPENDIX 1: Plastics & Climate CO2e Data (interactive spreadsheet)

APPENDIX 2: Methodology and Additional Observations

APPENDIX 3: Glossary of Terms

APPENDIX 4: TABLE: Communities in which the plastics industry releases >1 million tons CO2e each year

Community State CO2e Released (2020)
Houston/Baytown Texas 20.2 million tons
Freeport Texas 16.6 million tons
Norco/Taft Louisiana 10.3 million tons
Plaquemine/St. Gabriel Louisiana 8.6 million tons
Beaumont/Port Arthur Texas 7.8 million tons
Lake Charles Louisiana 7.7 million tons
Baton Rouge Louisiana 6.3 million tons
Geismar Louisiana 5.2 million tons
Point Comfort Texas 4.8 million tons
Kingsport Tennessee 4.1 million tons
Corpus Christi Texas 4 million tons
Orange Texas 3.3 million tons
Linden New Jersey 2.7 million tons
Longview Texas 2.4 million tons
Victoria Texas 1.9 million tons
Decatur Alabama 1.4 million tons
Hopewell Virginia 1.3 million tons
Calvert City Kentucky 1.27 million tons
 
 

APPENDIX 5. MAP: Greenhouse Gas Emissions from 130 U.S. Plastics Industry Facilities