A recent article in Undark Magazine by Beth Gardiner covers the toxic dangers of burning plastic, where this happens, and what we can do about it. I read Gardiner’s first book from 2019: Choked: The Age of Air Pollution and the Fight for a Cleaner Future, which was pretty good and interesting. She is an American journalist based in London. She has a new book out called Plastic Inc: The Secret History and Shocking Future of Big Oil’s Biggest Bet.
I remember when people used
to occasionally burn tires in outdoor bonfires since they burned hot and lasted
a long time as fuel. I remember the thick black smoke they produced. I worked
for a day once as a temporary assignment in a tire warehouse, and it was
unpleasant due to the smell of the tires, which gave me a headache. Hopefully,
no one burns tires anymore. I have read about countries touting burning plastic
for fuel as a sustainable practice that eliminates solid plastic waste. This is
done in incinerators with pollution control equipment in places like Sweden. Of
course, incinerators have generated a huge amount of public opposition, even
with pollution control equipment. These waste-to-energy plants, which burn
refuse of which plastic is a component, have been proposed as an alternative to
landfilling, and there is an ongoing debate about which is worse for the
environment and public health.
Gardiner first gives some
data:
“About 12 percent of plastic waste is burned
globally, according to a landmark study based on data through 2015. Even when
done in incinerators equipped with air scrubbers and
filters, such burning is linked to higher rates of premature birth, congenital
abnormalities including heart and neural tube defects, and may increase cancer
risk for those living nearby, studies have found.”
She goes to Tropodo,
Indonesia, where strips of plastic are used as fuel in low-tech open furnaces
for a local tofu factory. The village has been making tofu since the
1960s and currently processes 30 tons of soybeans per day. They used to use
rice husks for fuel, but switched to plastic in the 1980s. The plastic in use
now for fuel is cheap because it is from overseas waste, mostly from the U.S.,
Europe, Australia, Japan, and South Korea.
“Unsurprisingly, such burning introduces toxins into the
food chain. Setyorini’s research and advocacy group, Ecoton, or Ecological
Observation and Wetlands Conservation, has found microplastic fibers,
filaments, and fragments in Tropodo tofu, although the group has not yet
analyzed their chemical composition.”
“The researchers also found the second-highest dioxin
level ever detected in an egg in Asia; the highest was in Vietnam, at a former
U.S. military base tainted by historic use of the defoliant Agent Orange, where
a 10-year cleanup project began in 2019.”
Burning the plastic also
produces toxic ash, laden with dioxins and heavy metals. In the African country
of Ghana, where the plastic from e-waste is burned, local eggs have tested at
hundreds of times the safe limit for chlorinated dioxins, about three times
higher than eggs tested at Tropodo, which were tested at 70 times the safe
limit for dioxins.
“Burning plastic can also put a cocktail of dangerous
chemicals into the air, including dioxins, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons,
chlorinated furans, and hydrogen cyanide. That may be why, when a team
publishing in the journal Environment International tested the Ghanaian e-waste
workers’ blood, they found dioxins there too.”
Small particulate matter, PM
2.5, was measured in Tropodo at nearly 20 times Indonesia’s legal limit, and 30
times the stricter American 24-hour standard.
Gardiner next explores local
kilns in Indonesia that heat limestone from below in pits to form powdery lime
to be used in cement. These kilns also burn plastic for fuel.
“The plastic is piled all around, and includes diapers,
stacked-up tires and pieces of brightly colored foam.”
Many of these cement kilns
are unregulated, and some companies even tout burning plastic as a green
solution since it gets rid of plastic waste, or rather changes it from a solid
to airborne waste and ash waste. Advocates for burning plastic in these kilns
also say the very high temperatures burn up some of the more toxic gas
components.
“It’s hard to know exactly how much plastic cement
makers burn, since industry figures often group it under the broad heading of
“alternative fuel,” a category that also includes discarded clothes, tires,
wood, paper, and other garbage. A 2021 Reuters investigation reported
“alternative fuel” accounted for about half the cement industry’s fuel use in
Europe, and 15 percent in the United States.”
“One form that energy takes is “refuse-derived fuel,” or
RDF, a mixture of packaging, other plastic waste, scrap wood, and paper that
often ends up in cement kilns. More than $5.4 billion of RDF — upwards of 45
percent of which is consumed by the cement industry — is sold every year, and
that market’s value is expected to double in a decade, one analysis estimated.
“Governments are promoting actions to reduce the amount of materials being sent
to landfills, and we are one solution,” the global sustainability director of a
cement company told Grist.”
“The relentless push for new ways to make garbage go up
in smoke is a natural outgrowth of industry’s long-standing effort to frame
plastic pollution as nothing more than a waste management problem.”
“But that view only holds up if one disregards burning’s
impact on the climate, air quality, soil, and human health — not to mention the
harms wrought by unchecked production. Activists like to say incineration just
moves the landfill from the ground to the sky. That sounds apt.”
References:
Plastic
Pollution Is Bad Enough. Burning It Can Be Even Worse In places like Indonesia,
plastic refuse is often burned in unregulated low-tech furnaces that pose grave
health risks. Beth Gardiner. Undark Magazine. April 10, 2026. Plastic
Pollution Is Bad Enough. Burning It Can Be Even Worse.































