Plastic Atlas

Facts and figures about the world of synthetic polymers

A world without plastic?

The Plastic Atlas has the hard facts, data and figures to prove that the story of plastic that industry is telling us is a myth. We need urgent and drastic reductions in plastic production and consumption and regulation at the local, national and global level that tackle plastic pollution at the source.

Politics must hold the plastic industry accountable.
Barbara Unmüßig

Plastic Atlas Launch Teaser - Heinrich Böll Stiftung Abuja Office

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Plastic Atlas Nigeria

Plastic Atlas (Nigeria Edition)

In addition to the hard facts, data and figures telling the story of plastic from a global perspective, the Nigeria edition of the Plastic Atlas provides insights into the particular challenges facing Africa’s most populous country.

Contributions from the Plastic Atlas

Infographics from the Plastic Atlas

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Despite some efforts by lawmakers and the Nigerian government, the necessary reforms are beleaguered with a lack of political will to follow through and confront the plastics crisis.
Kofo Adeleke

Films on Plastic

EPR: Holding plastic producers accountable - Heinrich Böll Stiftung Abuja Office

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Tope Tadela, a famous Nigerian actor, calls for the effective implementation of the Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) policy to help tackle Lagos' plastic waste crisis. This campaign video was made available by our partner Rethinking Cities.

Plastic Atlas: The recycling myth - Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung

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We separate our rubbish and throw it into the right bins, and we think, ok, a disposable coffee cup is not the best, but if we dispose of it properly, we’ve done everything right – after all, it will be recycled. But in fact we are kidding ourselves, because a lot of the rubbish we generate doesn’t stay here but ends up somewhere else in the world."

Plastic waste management in Bida, Lagos - Heinrich Böll Stiftung Abuja Office

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Members of the Bida community in Lagos are taking plastic waste management into their own hands in the absence of adequate public service delivery. The video was made available by our partner Rethinking Cities.

Zero Waste city: How Kiel is cutting down on trash - Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung

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This is how the Delaperrière family goes shopping. By buying this way, they gener-ate very little waste. The family used to throw out two large bags of trash a week. That has gone down to one small bag a month.

Brand Audit: holding plastic polluters accountable - Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung

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Marjun and Anne are paying for their canoe trip in an unusual way – with rubbish. Today is World Cleanup Day, and here in Copenhagen, they are collecting rubbish. The firm that rents out the canoes is one of over 100 companies that are supporting the cleanup effort. 

Infographics from the Plastic Atlas

Plastic Atlas - 12 brief lessons on plastic and the planet

Plastic Atlas (Nigeria Edition)

Facts and figures about the world of synthetic polymers

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About the Plastic Atlas

In more than 19 chapters, our Plastic Atlas (Nigeria Edition) deals with very different aspects of plastic, illustrated by infographics. In addition to the hard facts, data and figures telling the story of plastic from a global perspective, it provides insights into the particular challenges facing Africa’s most populous country. Nigeria is already one of the largest importers and consumers of plastic on the continent. With plastic production and consumption set to increase, the country urgently needs to invest into its waste management capabilities and regulatory environment to tackle the mounting effects of plastic pollution on people and the environment. Nigeria’s efforts to hold companies in the beverage industry accountable for their contribution to the plastic crisis are laudable but need wider and more efficient implementation. In the end, however, solutions to the plastic crisis need to focus on preventing more plastic from entering the market and on implementing and supporting zero waste communities and cities, alternative delivery systems and reusable products.

Plastic waste is a lucrative business
The question of plastic waste naturally plays an important role in the Plastic Atlas. In order to stop the plastic flood, current efforts are concentrating primarily on waste management and consumers. This plays into the hands of the plastics industry, because it can shift the responsibility for the plastics crisis onto consumers and at the same time point the finger at Southeast Asia, which suffers the most from the garbage. Because the trade with plastic waste is a lucrative business and a large part of our plastic waste from Europe and other industrial countries is exported there.

More recently, we have realised that plastic is also an acute - and even deadly - threat to human health. And not only for people, for almost every organism on this planet, plastic has harmful consequences that can cause damage to the immune and reproductive systems, the liver and kidneys, and even cancer. The Plastic Atlas deals with plastics and health and also with the question of how women and men are affected in different ways.

Plastic Atlas also shows solutions
Nevertheless, there is reason for hope. The Plastic Atlas introduces the growing global movement Break Free From Plastic, which tackles the problem at its roots, holds those responsible accountable and contributes to the emergence and growth of zero waste cities and communities around the world. A new global plastics convention could prevent growing pollution from plastics at all stages of the production cycle as well as harm to human health.

A world without plastic pollution is a vision worth fighting for. Because plastic is an issue that concerns and moves each and every one of us. And we have only just begun to understand the enormous dimensions of this crisis. A change of course requires a sound knowledge of the causes, drivers and effects of the plastics crisis and the plastic atlas.