Krawczyk Aleksandra, Goc Alicja, Pellegrini Airis, Jaguszewska Natalia, Salas Brenda Olivos, Bukowski Michał, Grodzińska-Jurczak Małgorzata
Jagiellonian University, Doctoral School in the Social Sciences, Faculty of Geography and Geology, Institute of Geography and Spatial Management, Gronostajowa 7, 30-387, Kraków, Poland.
Jagiellonian University, Institute of Environmental Sciences, Gronostajowa 7, 30-387, Kraków, Poland.
Heliyon. 2024 Aug 17;10(16):e36299. doi: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e36299. eCollection 2024 Aug 30.
The world faces an alarming plastic waste problem. The volume of plastic waste is rapidly and continuously increasing, mainly due to the single-use plastics overconsumption, whereas its recycling and utilization leave much to be desired. Despite the negative effects of plastic on the environment and public health, the COVID-19 outbreak shifted the public attention away from the environmental issues, potentially giving space for extended lobbyism by interest groups and industry to delay or even prevent legislation to combat plastic pollution. Our study aims to understand how the media discourse on single-use plastic (SUP) in particular, evolves in the course of the pandemic. How it vary across EU Member States? For this purpose, we specifically analyse plastic-related articles in major prestigious daily newspapers published between June 2019 and June 2021 in four EU Member States: Germany, France, Italy, and Poland, as countries with different levels of sustainable transition to form a representative model of an European context. Additionally, between November 2022 and January 2023, we conducted a series of interviews via Google Meet, with journalists who agreed to be asked on the plastic issues they upraised. Our analysis initially covered 1076 articles, out of which 198 articles were rejected due to non-compliance with the subject or repetition, leaving 878 articles forming the database for eventual analysis. Specifically, we outline a key impact of the COVID-19 pandemic followed by a clear evolution on the number of plastic-related articles, on related stakeholder engagement, and the focus on specific SUP items. Moreover, we address a research gap - presenting a media portrait of different types of SUP in more details and highlighting the significance based on several culturally and linguistically very different countries within a single supranational state (EU). A clear trend reversal towards an informed knowledge circulation across the circular economy model of single-use plastics is ultimately essential to develop sustainable solutions to reject the disposable culture, stop the waste of natural resources, and reduce the consumption of oil or gas for plastic production and thus protect the climate.
世界面临着令人担忧的塑料垃圾问题。塑料垃圾的数量正在迅速且持续增加,主要原因是一次性塑料的过度消费,而其回收利用情况却不尽人意。尽管塑料对环境和公众健康有负面影响,但新冠疫情的爆发使公众注意力从环境问题上转移开,这可能为利益集团和行业进行更多游说活动提供了空间,从而拖延甚至阻止打击塑料污染的立法。我们的研究旨在了解媒体关于一次性塑料(SUP)的话语在疫情期间是如何演变的。它在欧盟成员国之间有何差异?为此,我们专门分析了2019年6月至2021年6月期间在四个欧盟成员国(德国、法国、意大利和波兰)的主要著名日报上发表的与塑料相关的文章,这些国家处于不同的可持续转型水平,以形成一个具有代表性的欧洲背景模型。此外,在2022年11月至2023年1月期间,我们通过谷歌Meet对同意就他们提出的塑料问题接受询问的记者进行了一系列采访。我们的分析最初涵盖了1076篇文章,其中198篇因不符合主题或重复而被剔除,剩下878篇文章形成了最终分析的数据库。具体而言,我们概述了新冠疫情的关键影响,随后是与塑料相关文章数量、相关利益攸关方参与度以及对特定一次性塑料物品关注度的明显演变。此外,我们填补了一个研究空白——更详细地呈现不同类型一次性塑料的媒体画像,并强调基于一个单一超国家(欧盟)内几个文化和语言差异很大的国家的重要性。最终,朝着一次性塑料循环经济模式进行明智的知识传播的明显趋势逆转对于开发可持续解决方案至关重要,以摒弃一次性文化、停止自然资源的浪费,并减少用于塑料生产的石油或天然气消耗,从而保护气候。