Unilever and the Plastic Soup
London/Rotterdam, 14 January 2017 – Unilever has committed to ensuring that all its packaging will be fully reusable, recyclable or […]
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London/Rotterdam, 14 January 2017 – Unilever has committed to ensuring that all its packaging will be fully reusable, recyclable or […]
In Germany, one in three face scrubs contains polyethylene (PE), and that is just as many as in 2014. Together […]
Every year the Plastic Soup Foundation awards a prize to a politician who has taken action to tackle the problem […]
NGOs call for blanket export ban of plastic waste from the UK, in part because of the questionable role of the Netherlands.
Deposits are the best tool for both a circular economy and less litter. Therefore, it is good to deploy the system for as much packaging as possible.
New report shows that synthetic fibres cause chronic lung infections and intestinal diseases, among other things.
The International Atomic Energy Agency has started a separate programme to battle the plastic soup using nuclear technology. Will it help?
Governments mostly leave the initiative of reducing plastic pollution to companies. But two thirds of the promises made by these companies are not acted on.
Level one of the gas crisis issued. To be less dependent on fossil fuels, we can also use less plastic.
Unilever’s mini packets significantly add to the plastic pollution in low-income countries. Yet the multinational is simply continuing business as usual.