Schoolwashing - Plastic Industry Making Sure That Science Class Has Lots Of "Informative" Content & Activities
WARREN, Mich. Wearing a lab coat, Eve Vitale asked a chemistry class at Warren Mott High School if anyone had heard anything bad about plastics. Hands shot up. It doesnt degrade, said one student. It hurts the environment, said another. But thats not really the plastics fault, said Vitale, chief executive of the Society of Plastics Engineers Foundation, a group of industry professionals. Thats the fault of humanity. After warning what a mess it would be in supermarkets and hospitals without plastics, Vitale instructed that the plastic pollution crisis could be addressed through stepped up personal responsibility, product innovation and improvements in recycling.
School campuses are a new battleground in an increasingly bitter brawl over plastics, as groups like Vitales seek to improve the reputation of a material that has become infamous as an environmental menace. The efforts are partially funded by companies involved in or dependent on fossil fuel production, through donations and conference sponsorships. Plastics manufacturing involves large amounts of oil and natural gas. Some of these companies see plastics as an opportunity to continue growing as demand for gasoline and diesel dissipates amid the rise of electric vehicles.
Vitales group dispatches its PlastiVan program throughout the academic year, with its team of plastic evangelists talking up the wonders of polymers to young audiences. Once housed out of an actual van, the program has since grown into a sophisticated messaging and recruitment operation, visiting as many as 175 schools annually. In Northeast Texas, hundreds of Girl Scouts have been awarded a PlastiVan-sponsored merit badge.
Another industry ally working separate from PlastiVan, conservative advocacy group PragerU, provides public school teachers in at least five states a classroom video that assures students they should not feel guilty about using so much plastic because plastics actually help the environment an assertion many environmental scientists would find absurd.
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https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2024/02/13/plastics-schools-plastivan-recycling/