Saturday, 27 December 2025

Let's stop saying 'single-use'


 

We’ve all heard the term ‘single-use packaging’, especially in reference to plastics.  Generally it means ‘disposable’.  The cellophane wrapper that your supermarket apples came in has served its purpose. However careful you were in opening the bag, it’s highly unlikely you’ll use the bag again so it goes in the bin - destination recycling depot. That was the wrapper’s single purpose - to carry your apples home from the supermarket. Done.

The term ‘single-use’, in reference to plastics, was first coined by the medical industry in the 1960s. Single-use medical items such as syringes and catheters were now hygienic.  No longer was there a lengthy sterilising process.  Items could be used once and then disposed of. ‘Single-use plastics’ was a positive term.


Only recently has the phrase been rebranded from having a positive connotation to being something harmful and wasteful. In 2017, the BBC’s Blue Planet brought into our living rooms an ocean of carrier bags, plastic straws and take-away cartons floating alongside turtles and seahorses.  


Suddenly, the tide turned on throwaway plastic. Everyone—from journalists and influencers to schoolchildren and pensioners—declared war on disposable packaging, starting with the humble drinking straw. The shift was undeniable.  In 2018, 'single-use' was crowned Collins Dictionary’s Word of the Year, transforming a technical industry term into the global byword for pollution.


We’re all aiming to reduce plastic usage, and ultimately landfill and pollution.  So, what’s the problem with the term ‘single-use’.  Well of course we should be cutting down (in fact eliminating) single-use items, but what about everything else?  If you’ve read *any* of my other articles, you’ll know that plastics in general are not recycled (ie, made into something of the same value and purpose) but downcycled to other (lesser) items such as clothing and park benches, then finally not repurposed at all, but in landfill.  


Materials such as aluminium and glass are infinitely recyclable.  This means you could be drinking from a bottle with molecules that were first in a glass bottle a hundred years ago, and could still be made into bottles in another hundred or even a thousand years. 


So, something made of plastic, such as a sports bottle, tupperware or even polyester clothing wouldn’t be thought of as single-use because you would use it many times (hopefully) before it cracks, tears or is otherwise unfit for purpose.  Yet, even if you dispose of your many-use product responsibly and it ends up being ‘recycled’, this is only delaying its ultimate fate in landfill, or worse in polluting the environment.  Your plastic item may have been used a hundred times in total, but compare this to the life of glass.  Infinity minus a hundred is infinity.  Plastic will always be inferior.


In addition to this, plastic is not inert.  It is constantly shedding micro-plastics which are polluting the environment and the food or whatever else that they come into contact with. By fighting single-use plastics, we are missing the point. We are losing sight of the bigger picture.  Fixating on 'single-use' plastics is a dangerous distraction. It implies that if we keep the plastic longer, the problem is solved. It isn't. We need to widen our scope to the entire polymer economy, because as long as we keep producing the material, we keep feeding the crisis. The enemy is not 'single-use.' The enemy is plastic.



Photo by Naja Bertolt Jensen on Unsplash

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Let's stop saying 'single-use'

  We’ve all heard the term ‘single-use packaging’, especially in reference to plastics.  Generally it means ‘disposable’.  The cellophane wr...