President Donald Trump has signed an executive order aimed at encouraging the US government and consumers to buy plastic drinking straws, pushing back efforts by his predecessor to phase out single-use plastics and tackle waste.
“We’re going back to plastic straws,” Trump told reporters at the White House as he signed the order, saying that paper straws ‘don’t work’.
“I don’t think plastic is going to affect a shark very much, as they’re munching their way through the ocean,” Trump said.
Trump’s Democratic predecessor, President Joe Biden, had proposed environmental measures to lower consumption of non-biodegradable single-use plastics, which damage ecosystems and contaminate food supplies. His administration also backed a global treaty aimed at putting a cap on plastic production.
The executive order was part of a broader weakening of environmental commitments by Trump, who in one of the first acts of his second term removed the United States from the Paris climate agreement for the second time.
Trump also rescinded a Biden administration policy to end the use of all single-use plastic products on federal lands by 2032.
Dozens of countries have imposed bans on various kinds of single-use plastics, produced mainly through petrochemicals and used to make shopping bags, bottles and other disposable items. If no new controls are introduced, the amount of plastic waste dumped into the environment is projected to rise from 81 million metric tonnes in 2020 to 119m tn in 2040, according to OECD research published last year.