From Wenonah Hauter, Food & Water Watch <[email protected]>
Subject Oceans of toxic plastics
Date February 2, 2022 8:31 PM
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Did you know that 8.3 billion tons of plastic have been produced since 1950? Most of the plastic produced ends up in our rivers, lakes and oceans, and kills over 100,000 marine mammals and sea turtles each year. That’s why Food & Water Watch is fighting back against Big Oil & Gas’s fracking-to-plastics pipeline. Together, we can take on Big Oil & Gas directly. Donate today.
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John,

The U.S. is the largest global source of plastic waste. All this plastic waste is polluting our rivers, lakes, oceans, beaches, parks and neighborhoods. It’s in the air, dirt and dust. It’s in our food and even in Arctic sea ice. Simply put: It’s EVERYWHERE.

Why? Because fracking is fueling the dangerous plastics buildout. It’s a vicious cycle where more fracking drives more fracked gas infrastructure – like pipelines, power plants and more plastics manufacturing – and that in turn encourages more fracking.

More fracking also means more deadly greenhouse gases that are causing climate change. It’s why Food & Water Watch is taking on Big Oil & Gas directly. We’re fighting for a livable future — one free of dangerous and dirty fracking, pipelines and power plants. You can help. Make a gift today.
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U.S. fracking has produced an oversupply of fracked gas and ethane, a fracking byproduct used to manufacture plastics, in the past few years. This has created a gas glut that fuels the expansion of petrochemical and plastics plants.

This renewed push represents a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for plastics manufacturing and provides the fracking industry with a polluting partner to absorb the increasing quantities of fracked gas. In other words, the plastics and fracking industries rely on one another to prop up their polluting business models.

Help Take on Big Oil & Gas
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All these petrochemical and plastics plants emit massive amounts of air pollution and greenhouse gases, including the methane that accelerates climate change. Communities of color and low-income communities are disproportionately impacted by the dangerous greenhouse gas emissions and toxic chemicals released during the production or incineration of plastics since these plants are most often built in their communities.

And all that plastic doesn’t decompose. Instead, plastic breaks down into microplastic molecules that end up in everything, including our food and water – and in us! On average, people are consuming about five grams of this residual plastic weekly — roughly the same amount of plastic as found in one credit card!

That’s why we're doubling down and working even harder to end the fracking-to-plastics pipeline by calling for a ban on fracking and a halt to new power plants, pipelines, and oil and gas export facilities. Fracking and plastics are killing the planet, its wildlife and us – it’s time to put an end to this madness. Will you join our fight and help take on Big Oil & Gas?
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Count Me In
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Onward together,

Wenonah Hauter
Founder and Executive Director
Food & Water Watch

Ready to fight like you live here?


Donate
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Food & Water Watch and its affiliated organization, Food & Water Action, are advocacy groups with a common mission to protect our food, water and climate.

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