Can Humanity Escape Its Toxic Relationship with Plastic?

I. Plastic as the Framework of Modern Life

Could a modern person get by without plastic? When an American female author prepared to take on the challenge of avoiding plastic for a full day, she soon realised: modern life is virtually impossible without it. Within ten seconds of waking up, she had to alter the challenge: instead, she would simply record every plastic item she touched throughout the day. The result was a staggering list spanning four full pages and 196 items. Most of these were packaging materials, particularly for food: yoghurt pots, juice cans, baby bottles, mineral water bottles, bread bags, tea bags, strawberry containers, the plastic wrap around tea tins…

In short, “plastic has become the skeleton, connective tissue, and smooth exterior of modern life.”

This set Susan Freinkel on a path of sustained observation, culminating in a cultural and historical study titled *The Battle of Plastic* (*Plastic: A Toxic Love Story*). As the literal title suggests, she argues that our relationship with plastic, much like a romance, ought to be healthy and fulfilling. Yet, once it devolves into unhealthy dependency, it becomes toxic. In the book, she explores how our entanglement with plastic has been shaped by technology, culture, and capital into a distorted, toxic bond, and examines how we must shift our mindset and take concrete action to coexist more safely and sustainably with a material we love to hate, yet seem utterly unable to escape.

II. The History of Plastic

Plastic is so ubiquitous that it seems as though it has been part of human society for a very long time. In reality, it was not until the 1940s that people began to encounter this synthetic material in everyday life. By 1979, however, US plastic production had surpassed steel—the defining material of the Industrial Age—for the first time. Not long after, it quickly found its way into the homes of ordinary Chinese citizens following the reform and opening-up. More than four decades on, global annual plastic consumption has reached 400 million tonnes. Every minute, a million plastic bags are used, and around eight million tonnes of plastic waste end up in the ocean each year. If laid end to end, this would circle the Earth 420 times.

China is the world’s largest consumer of plastic, with an annual consumption of 80 million tonnes, averaging around 50 kg per person per year. Yet the US leads in per capita use, at 216 kg annually. How did we reach this point?

Tracing the development of the plastics industry may help shed light on this historical trajectory.

Although the technology to produce plastic was mastered as early as 1907, the rise of the plastics industry can arguably be “attributed” to the US “military-industrial complex”.

In 1941, shortly after the attack on Pearl Harbor, the head of the US Army’s equipment supply division proposed replacing aluminium, brass, and other strategic metals with plastics wherever possible. The major plastic materials we know today—polyethylene, nylon, acrylic, and expanded polystyrene—were only mass-produced during the Second World War.

The raw materials for most plastics are, in fact, by-products of oil refining. Consequently, after the war, the plastics sector—operating as part of the petrochemical industry—worked tirelessly to find new applications for these wartime-born products, seeking to replace traditional materials such as steel, paper, glass, and timber.

◎ Expanded polystyrene, prized for its excellent buoyancy and insulation, was used during the war to manufacture lifeboats for the US Coast Guard. After the war, it became the material of choice for picnic cups and coolers. Image credit: pixabay.com

One could argue that the rapid proliferation of plastic in human society is itself a by-product of oil, the bedrock of the American economy. This is particularly evident in the plastic bags, beverage bottles, disposable plates, takeout containers, and nested pastry wrappers that now saturate our daily food consumption. Rather than stemming from careful forethought, this plastic saturation—now so commonplace that we have grown both accustomed to it and weary of it—occurred almost by default.

At the same time, an unexpected consequence is that without the plastics industry consuming these refining by-products and thereby keeping oil prices low, humanity might not have generated such vast quantities of greenhouse gases that drive global warming.

However, the author does not crudely paint plastic as an inherently villainous material, but rather acknowledges the legitimate human need for it. Plastic’s distinct advantage lies in its exceptional malleability and versatility, along with its ease of hardening into finished products. This material profile has not only liberated us from the limitations of natural resources, boosting manufacturing capabilities, but has also led many to feel that modern society itself possesses the same boundless mouldability as plastic.

◎ In the late 1960s, Japan’s Panasonic Corporation used plastic to design the curved Toot-a-Loop radio. At the time, plastic embodied an alluring and progressive modern aesthetic. Image credit: pinterest.com

Freinkel observes: “Nineteenth-century patents brim with combinatorial inventions featuring cork, sawdust, rubber, viscose, and even blood and milk protein. All these designs aimed to produce materials with some of the characteristics of what we now call plastic.” In other words, long before the word “plastic” entered the lexicon, humanity already harboured the intention and desire to explore and create this category of synthetic materials.

So how did plastic come to inspire such alarm among environmentally and health-conscious circles, becoming a universal target for condemnation?

The answer lies in plastic’s unique nature: its production requires the extraction of finite petroleum resources from the natural world. Yet when discarded as waste, its light and thin composition allows it to be easily scattered and carried by wind and water, spreading pollution across wider areas. Worse still, nature has yet to evolve microorganisms capable of breaking down these giant, complex long-chain molecules.

◉ In 2015, a team of scientists discovered a sea turtle struggling to breathe in Costa Rican waters, with a disposable plastic straw measuring over 10 cm lodged in its nostril. Image source: implasticfree.com

Is this really plastic’s fault? Looked at from another angle, this very trait suggests that plastic should be regarded as a precious material, handled with greater care and appreciation. In fact, when plastic first came into use, scientists valued its durability and high mouldability far more than its cheapness and convenience. In the early post-war years, the practical applications of plastic followed the same development path as during the conflict, being used primarily to manufacture durable goods. Yet, responding to market forces, the plastics industry quickly realised that disposability was the key to sustained growth, and began actively promoting a throwaway consumer culture.

◉ The cover of the American magazine Life from 1955, depicting a family of three joyfully tossing disposable plastic items into the air. The accompanying feature encouraged readers to embrace single-use products, liberating them from the chore of washing up. Image source: medium.com

As a result, plastic products have become increasingly intertwined with a ‘throwaway’ culture of disposable consumption. We have even begun to use the word ‘plastic’ to describe interpersonal relationships that cannot withstand the test of time, are easily discarded, or are inherently fragile—such as ‘plastic friendships’ or ‘plastic relatives’.

According to data from the China Sustainable Plastic Packaging Research Report, global plastic production reached approximately 414 million tonnes in 2023. Of this, two-thirds ends up as waste after brief use, while around 42 per cent of plastic raw materials are dedicated to manufacturing plastic packaging. Research into plastic waste in Suzhou, China, reveals that flexible plastics account for more than 60 per cent of the total. Various shopping bags are the largest source of flexible plastic waste, making up 43 per cent, followed by food packaging (20 per cent) and parcel packaging (17 per cent).

◉ People generate vast amounts of single-use plastic waste in their everyday lives. Image source: Clean Water Action
This corroborates a warning issued back in 1980 by polymer chemist Anthony Andrady: the paradox of plastics being both durable and disposable ‘will be a major problem for the environment’.

III. Plastic, a Metaphor for Contemporary Life

In fact, when it comes to the increasingly pervasive throwaway lifestyle, plastic has at most merely accelerated the process: long before its advent, the trend was already spreading and expanding with growing radicalism throughout human society. American historian Susan Strasser notes in *Waste and Want: A Social History of Trash* that the throwaway lifestyle and single-use consumer goods fundamentally stem from a shift in how people relate to the material world around them as modern society evolved.

Within traditional communities and households, reuse was a practice deeply embedded in everyday life: leftovers served as animal feed; human waste was composted; old garments were stitched into new clothing or repurposed as raw material for rugs; and damaged goods were mended or taken apart for spare parts to be used later.

Such a community or household functioned as a self-sufficient cycle: once an item served its purpose, it was not discarded as waste, but retained as raw material for further use.

Yet by the mid-to-late nineteenth century, this way of life began to unravel. Households were increasingly flooded with manufactured goods, while domestic production and handcrafting skills steadily declined. As capitalist metropolises expanded, many young people living in apartments simply lacked the time and space their parents had to accumulate and store possessions.

Furthermore, as the British Marxist Raymond Williams observed, a defining characteristic of modern society is “fluent accumulation” — the unseen flow of commodities and information through electrical, hydraulic, gas, and telecommunications networks that binds the private home to the wider world. These public utilities dispensed with the domestic chores of lighting fires, cleaning lamps, and hauling timber, coal, and water. Consequently, homes were freed from the “messy” tools and raw materials that once filled living spaces, resulting in an environment of striking tidiness.

This transformation in lifestyle is equally evident in modernist aesthetics. In his 1958 film *Mon Oncle*, French director Jacques Tati satirised a modernist spatial ideal characterised by sparse living rooms, monochrome palettes, rigid linear geometry, and spotless technological fixtures. Yet, rather than remaining a mere parody, this aesthetic came to dominate everyday modern life, a legacy that persists to this day.

◉ The spotlessly clean yet dull and sterile modern home interior in the French film *My Uncle*. Source: Film still
The outcome of this historical shift is a growing insensitivity to an object’s material nature and how it is made. Alongside this, the skills and habits required to mend and adapt everyday items slowly fade away. Simultaneously, tolerance for the clutter of household possessions dwindles, paving the way for the mass generation of what we now call modern waste. This trend shows no sign of abating. Indeed, many young people today rarely get the chance to hand-pick their own vegetables and fruit. Even when they do cook, they are far more likely to be preparing cucumbers or tomatoes pre-wrapped in plastic film, bought from a supermarket or ordered online.Meanwhile, corporate giants in the food and drink sector have been keen to cater to, and actively promote, this disposable lifestyle. When the plastic soft-drink bottle was introduced in 1973, it was swiftly adopted by industry titans such as Coca-Cola and Pepsi. Only then did the habit of carrying drinks on the go truly take hold. The plastic bottle, in turn, propelled significant growth across the wider beverage industry. By the year 2000, the average American was consuming 50 gallons (189.3 litres) of soft drink annually—double the volume consumed prior to the advent of the plastic bottle. Corporate sales figures soared, and consumers revelled in an increasingly abundant and convenient way of life. Yet, who ever paused to consider what should be done with all those plastic bottles once they were emptied and tossed aside?

For modern waste, there is only one destination: the bin. Ironically, modern society’s approach to waste disposal relies on the same principle of ‘concealment through displacement’: residents simply clear refuse from the privacy of their own homes. What actually happens to those empty bottles and discarded food wrappers once they enter the public waste system? Do they flow into our rivers and oceans, or get buried on poorer, more marginalised land? To such questions, the modern public remains strikingly ignorant and utterly indifferent.

IV. The Uncertain Future of Plastic

Plastic that releases toxic fumes when burnt, plastic drifting across oceans unable to break down in nature, plastic killing animals from within, and microplastics that have already infiltrated the food chain and our own bodies – these are merely the by-products of our contemporary way of life. The true crisis is that within less than a century of widespread use, we already know what plastic waste will bring, yet the very structure of modern living makes it almost impossible to stop relying on single-use plastic. It mirrors how so many find themselves unable to extricate themselves from a toxic relationship.

We certainly cannot expect to solve this problem by simply reverting to a pre-modern past. Modern society offers no shortage of solutions for managing contemporary waste. Yet these very solutions demand rigorous scrutiny. During the American counterculture movement of the 1960s, radical environmentalists began championing lifestyles and philosophies built on recycling. Artists even elevated the collage and repurposing of discarded materials into art. Over time, these ideas were absorbed into mainstream values, prompting governments to establish municipal recycling networks. However, centralised recycling infrastructure further drove to extinction the ‘informal’ circular economies that had long been woven into traditional ways of living.

There are, of course, technological fixes on offer: polyester bottles repurposed into raw materials for synthetic wool, plastic resin codes designed to streamline sorting and recycling, and ongoing research into biodegradable bioplastics. Yet recent findings by Chinese scientists indicate that biodegradable plastics continue to pose risks to both the environment and human health.

◉ On 5 June, a collaborative research team from the Chinese Research Academy of Environmental Sciences, Sichuan University, and Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology published a paper titled ‘Ecological Risks of Biodegradable Plastics’ in the journal *Science*. The study highlights that once biodegradable plastics undergo weathering, they shed vast quantities of micro- and nanoplastics, along with toxic chemicals. The resulting environmental risks are far from negligible.

We cannot dismiss these modern endeavours. Yet whether through the ‘alternative’ lifestyles of a fringe minority, state-run centralised recycling, or corporate technological innovations, none have succeeded in untangling the distorted relationship between most people’s daily routines and the material world they inhabit. The future of our relationship with plastic remains steeped in crisis and uncertainty: cumulative global plastic waste now stands at 9.2 billion tonnes, with merely 9 per cent recycled, 12 per cent incinerated, and a staggering 79 per cent buried or left to accumulate in the natural environment.

So, where precisely has the system broken down? Guided by the unique insights Freinkel provides in this book, should we not be working to recalibrate this imbalanced relationship within the material framework of modern society? If we do not, humanity will merely keep breeding unhealthy new cravings and dependencies on plastic. Food delivery services are a prime illustration. Delegating our meals to courier platforms has spawned an enormous surge in plastic waste. Reports indicate that order volumes on China’s leading delivery apps skyrocketed from 1.7 billion in 2015 to 17.12 billion in 2020. In the same period, plastic consumption leapt from 57,000 tonnes to 574,000 tonnes – a tenfold increase in just five years.

◉ Delivery packaging waste has now become a significant portion of municipal solid waste.

Human society may well invent further conveniences akin to food delivery that only amplify our need for plastic. Freinkel argues that the genuine path forward lies in severing our unhealthy reliance on the material and cultivating an entirely new relationship with it. Put simply, we must stop fixating on plastic itself and instead ask: which products are truly best suited to plastic design and manufacture? How must we use plastic goods to prevent the generation of vast quantities of unrecyclable waste that degrades the Earth’s ecosystems?

Foodthink Author
Zheng Yuyang
An INTP from the Second Livestock Farm in Bayan County, Heilongjiang Province, now navigating life in Beijing. After spending four months delivering meals in the capital, he now focuses primarily on digital technology, agricultural innovation, and sustainable development.

 

 

 

Call for Stories: ‘Eat Something Good’
Are you confident that humanity can break free from its unhealthy reliance on plastic? This question can likely only be answered through the actions of each individual. For the latest instalment of the “Eat Well” column, Foodthink is inviting readers to share their frustrations with food overpackaging.

With plastic packaging sealed layer upon layer, inside and out, and single-use plastic cutlery thrown in, is any of it truly necessary?

Beyond takeaway meals, in what other areas of daily life have you encountered excessive plastic packaging?

Do you have any practical tips for cutting down on plastic waste?

Scan the QR code on the poster to share your thoughts with us.

If you’d like to explore more solutions for living without single-use plastics, join us at this engaging, plastic-cutting “Eco Reuse Day” market! Here, you’ll discover green living initiatives such as reusable coffee cups, professional sports equipment repairs, ‘bring-your-own-container’ shopping, and second-hand swaps. Alongside numerous stallholders, you can find a sustainable lifestyle that works for you.

Editor: Tianle