If someone could collect and recycle all the unrecycled plastic on earth, this person would be richer than any individual on the planet.
Business
Standard : This year, I served on the judging panel for The
Royal Statistical Society’s International Statistic of the Year.
On
Dec. 18, we announced the winner: 90.5 per cent, the amount of
plastic that has never been recycled. Okay – but why is that such a
big deal?
Much
like Oxford English Dictionary’s “Word of the Year”
competition, the international statistic is meant to capture the
zeitgeist of this year. The judging panel accepted nominations from
the statistical community and the public at large for a statistic
they feel shines a light on today’s most pressing issues.
Last
year’s winner was 69. That’s the annual number of Americans
killed, on average, by lawn mowers – compared to two Americans
killed annually, on average, by immigrant jihadist terrorists and the
11,737 Americans killed annually by being shot by another American.
That figure, first shared in The Huffington Post, was highlighted in
a viral tweet by Kim
Kardashian in response to the proposed migrant ban.
This
year’s statistic came into prominence from a United Nations report.
The chair of the judges and RSS president, Sir David Spiegelhalter,
said: “It’s really concerning that so little plastic has ever
been recycled and, as a result, so much plastic waste has leached out
into the world’s environment. It’s a great, growing and genuinely
world problem.”
Let’s
take a closer look at this year’s winning statistic. About 90.5
percent of the 6.3 billion metric tons of plastic
waste produced since mass production began about 60 years ago is
now lying around our planet in landfills and oceans or has been
incinerated. If we don’t change our ways, by 2050, there will be
about 12 billion metric tons of plastic waste.
When
the panel first began looking at this statistic, I really didn’t
have any comprehension of what billions of tons of plastic means.
Based on a study from 2015 and some back of the envelope
calculations, that’s the equivalent of 7.2 trillion grocery bags
full of plastic as of 2018.
But
again, I still didn’t quite have a feel for how much that actually
is. People tend to use distance measurements to compare numbers, so I
tried that. Assuming that a grocery bag of plastic is about 1 foot
high, if you stacked the grocery bags, you could go to the moon and
back 5,790 times. That’s starting to feel a bit more real.
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