by Chris DeArmitt
June 19, 2026

from RealClearEnergy Website

 

 

Dr. Chris DeArmitt

is a leading plastics researcher. He holds an PhD in Chemistry and has been elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry as well as Fellow of the Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining.









The Plastic Crisis Narrative

collides with 50 Years of Research...

 

 

 

These days, concerns about plastics and microplastics are everywhere.

 

Headlines warn us that plastics are the danger lurking in your kitchen utensils, or Netflix airs a documentary claiming microplastics lead to infertility.

 

Health and Human Services Secretary RFK Jr. has 'declared war' on microplastics.

 

The conclusion many people draw is simple:

less plastic must mean a healthier planet...

But that conclusion does not actually follow from the evidence.

 

There is a growing gap between what the public is being told and what the scientific evidence actually shows. Most people are savvy enough to know that they should not trust everything they read or watch.

 

While we are seeing some scientists raise the alarm on the incomplete science on microplastics, many news outlets continue to misconstrue, fail to critically question or hyperbolize the results of scientific studies that associate any health conditions with microplastics.

 

Let us take a look at what decades of peer-reviewed studies say and compare that to what we are being told.

 

We are told that we are "drowning in plastic."

Yet, plastic is about one percent of materials we use and waste we create.

Although we do use a significant amount of materials, to blame our overconsumption solely on plastic would be a stretch.

We are told that there is an ocean-plastic emergency and that the oceans are "choking on plastic"...

In actuality, the majority of the problem is abandoned fishing nets.

 

We have over 2,000 studies on plastics spanning 50 years. The science is clear that plastics are not the danger loud voices claim them to be.

 

Compounding this, a growing number of high-profile studies on microplastics have been challenged by the scientific community due to issues such as contamination during sampling, lack of proper controls, and unreliable detection methods that can misidentify biological materials as plastics.

 

Again and again, when we compare the narrative about plastic to independent peer-reviewed science, there is a significant gap.

 

Lifecycle assessments, the standard tool for comparing materials, often show that replacing plastics with alternatives increases environmental impact.

 

Across many applications, substitutes require far more material, use more energy to produce and transport, and generate higher greenhouse gas emissions.

 

On average, plastics have the lowest environmental impact in over 90% of applications.

Replacing them means 3-4 times more waste, 3 times more greenhouse gas, more fossil fuel use and more cost.

Alternatives to plastic like paper, metal, and glass mean using double the amount of fossil fuel.

 

In fact, calculations show that the entire plastics industry may well be fossil fuel negative because although 4% of fossil fuel is used to make plastics, more than 4% is saved by using plastics.

 

So,

why are we as a country pursuing policies to ban and tax the least expensive, most environmentally responsible option we have?

This counterproductive rhetoric has to stop.

 

We shouldn't be planning actions to protect and preserve our planet based on sound bites and headlines. Our environment and the futures of our children deserve better than that.

 

Instead, those who are currently shaping the conversation - our policymakers, community leaders, and most importantly the media - must undertake a more concerted effort to connect with the professors, researchers, and scientists who have published a multitude of peer-reviewed studies.

 

In other words:

get your science from 'scientists,' not click-bait...