|  Ever since plastic has been 
                                  introuduced, it has been portrayed in equally 
                                  opposite perspectives: the revolutionary miracle 
                                  material versus the compromise of industrial 
                                  progress. 
 Some people point plastics as a material that 
                                  somehow succeeds at nature's expense; indifferent 
                                  and perhaps even hostile to the concept of conservation. 
                                  Of course the result... though dramatic, more 
                                  often represents a collection of misconceptions 
                                  rather than the facts.
 
 A clearer picture is required if we are to agree 
                                  upon effective solutions to our environmental 
                                  challenges. In fact, the very characteristics 
                                  most often cited as the major environmental 
                                  faults are exactly those qualities that originally 
                                  made plastics a miracle material ... and will 
                                  continue to make plastics an important part 
                                  of our lives in the future.
 
 A large contribution made by plastics to the 
                                  packaging industry is its ability to be made 
                                  into very thin films and containers. It is absolutely 
                                  true that packagers are increasingly substituting 
                                  plastics for alternative packaging materials 
                                  because they can achieve significant reductions 
                                  in packaging weight, volume and cost for the 
                                  same amount of product delivered.
 
 If other materials were substituted for plastics 
                                  in packaging, the environmental impact would 
                                  be severe. It has been estimated that the weight 
                                  of packaging waste would increase over 400 %, 
                                  the volume of packaging waste would increase 
                                  over 250 %, energy consumption would increase 
                                  over 200 percent and overall packaging costs 
                                  would increase 210 percent.
 
 Packaging is an essential part of the public 
                                  health, economic well-being, standard of living 
                                  and lifestyle of modern societies. Countries 
                                  lacking sophisticated packaging and distribution 
                                  systems have food contamination and spoilage 
                                  rates approaching 50 percent - a lot more trash 
                                  requiring disposal. In India, the spoilage rates 
                                  are also very high.
 
 Modern landfills need to be managed to entomb 
                                  trash so that little, if any, degradation actually 
                                  occurs. Because of the lack of oxygen and moisture 
                                  required for decomposition, even vegetable matter 
                                  shows little decay over decades. The by-products 
                                  resulting from the degradation of any material 
                                  can have serious environmental consequences, 
                                  including toxic leachates and atmospheric greenhouse 
                                  gases.
 
 Materials that are landfilled should be physically 
                                  stable, non-degradable, and not contribute to 
                                  groundwater contamination or gas generation. 
                                  Plastics meet these criteria and behave as "model 
                                  citizens" in a landfill environment.
 
 As people become better informed about solid 
                                  waste issues, the focus of attention will shift 
                                  away from the degradability myth and toward 
                                  real solutions like source reduction, reuse, 
                                  recycling and recovery of energy - solutions 
                                  in which plastics play an important role.
 
 To obtain maximum scrap value, the plastics 
                                  should be separated by type just as you would 
                                  separate different types of paper or colours 
                                  of glass. If the plastics are not separated 
                                  and remain commingled, some recycling operators 
                                  can use them to produce lumber-substitutes for 
                                  numerous outdoor applications.
 
 While recycling must continue to play a vital 
                                  role in diverting waste from landfill where 
                                  technically and economically feasible, most 
                                  solid waste officials now agree that an integrated 
                                  approach to resource management is the most 
                                  effective way to achieve safe, economical results.
 
 An integrated approach selectively utilizes 
                                  source reduction (making less), reuse (where 
                                  appropriate), resource recovery (including materials 
                                  recovery through recycling and energy recovery) 
                                  and, finally, retention in landfill.
 
 
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