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COMMON SUSTAINABILITY MYTHS THAT ARE HOLDING YOU BACK

Hands holding a burning Earth

&Tab;&Tab;<div class&equals;"wpcnt">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<div class&equals;"wpa">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<span class&equals;"wpa-about">Advertisements<&sol;span>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<div class&equals;"u top&lowbar;amp">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<amp-ad width&equals;"300" height&equals;"265"&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab; type&equals;"pubmine"&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab; data-siteid&equals;"173035871"&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab; data-section&equals;"1">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;amp-ad>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;div>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;div>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;div><p>&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The modern environmental movement suffers from a dangerous obsession with optics over outcomes&period; You are currently participating in a marketplace of virtue that prioritizes the feeling of being green over the physics of being sustainable&period; Since the mid-twentieth century&comma; the industrial complex has successfully offloaded the burden of planetary stewardship onto your individual shoulders while simultaneously providing you with a suite of false solutions&period; These myths do more than just waste your money&period; They provide a psychological hall pass that allows the status quo of high-emission consumption to persist&period; If you want to move the needle on climate stability&comma; you must first dismantle the profitable fairy tales that govern your daily choices&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">True sustainability is not a lifestyle brand&period; It is an engineering and logistical challenge that requires a radical audit of your assumptions&period; Most of what you consider eco-friendly is merely a less-bad version of a catastrophic system&period; This editorial examines the seven most pervasive myths in the sustainability sector&comma; supported by lifecycle assessments&comma; geopolitical data&comma; and industrial history&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">THE GREAT RECYCLING DECEPTION<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">You likely believe that the blue bin is a portal to a circular economy&period; This is perhaps the most successful corporate gaslighting campaign in history&period; Since 1950&comma; humans have produced more than nine billion tons of plastic&period; Less than nine percent of that material has ever been recycled&period; The remaining ninety-one percent sits in landfills&comma; floats in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch&comma; or has been incinerated&comma; releasing toxic dioxins into the atmosphere&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Mechanical recycling for plastics is fundamentally limited&period; Every time you melt down a plastic bottle&comma; the polymer chains shorten and the material loses integrity&period; Most plastic can only be recycled once or twice before it becomes unusable for food-grade packaging&period; The industry terminology for this is downcycling&period; That bottle of soda does not become another bottle of soda&period; It becomes a polyester carpet or a park bench that will eventually end up in a landfill anyway&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Why did we buy into this&quest; In the nineteen-seventies&comma; the petrochemical industry faced the threat of bans on single-use plastics&period; Their response was to fund a massive public relations effort to promote recycling as a viable solution&comma; knowing full well that the economics did not work&period; It is cheaper for a corporation to manufacture new plastic from fresh natural gas than it is to collect&comma; sort&comma; wash&comma; and process your used containers&period; When you sort your trash&comma; you are performing free labor for an industry that has no intention of closing the loop&period; You are wishcycling—throwing items into the bin and hoping for a miracle that the market cannot provide&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">THE LOCAL FOOD FALLACY<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The mantra of eat local suggests that the distance your food travels is the primary determinant of its carbon footprint&period; You likely assume that a tomato grown ten miles away is inherently better for the planet than one shipped from a thousand miles away&period; This logic ignores the total energy intensity of production&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Data from the University of Oxford shows that transportation typically accounts for less than ten percent of the total greenhouse gas emissions of most food products&period; For beef&comma; the figure is closer to one percent&period; The vast majority of emissions occur on the farm through land-use changes&comma; fertilizer application&comma; and methane release&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Consider a study comparing tomatoes grown in the United Kingdom versus those shipped from Spain&period; Growing tomatoes in a cold climate like London requires heated greenhouses&comma; often powered by natural gas&period; The energy required to maintain that artificial heat far exceeds the carbon cost of shipping naturally sun-grown tomatoes from a warmer region in Spain&period; By focusing on food miles&comma; you ignore the efficiency of the environment&period; You might be supporting a local business&comma; but you are not necessarily supporting the climate&period; Are you prioritizing the zip code of your food over the energy required to grow it&quest;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">THE ELECTRIC VEHICLE CLEANLINESS MIRAGE<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Electric vehicles &lpar;EVs&rpar; are marketed as the ultimate zero-emission solution&period; You are told that by switching to a battery-powered car&comma; you are removing your footprint from the road&period; This narrative conveniently ignores the massive carbon debt incurred before the vehicle ever reaches your driveway&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The manufacturing of an EV&comma; specifically the battery&comma; is significantly more carbon-intensive than the production of an internal combustion engine &lpar;ICE&rpar; vehicle&period; Mining lithium&comma; cobalt&comma; and nickel requires massive industrial machinery and significant water resources&comma; often in regions with lax environmental regulations like the Democratic Republic of Congo or Inner Mongolia&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">An EV typically starts its life with a carbon debt that is forty to seventy percent higher than an ICE car&period; You must drive that vehicle for roughly fifteen thousand to twenty thousand miles before you reach carbon parity—assuming you are charging it on a grid that is not powered by coal&period; If your electricity comes from fossil fuels&comma; the parity point pushes even further into the future&period; Furthermore&comma; EVs are significantly heavier than traditional cars&comma; leading to increased tire-wear particles&comma; which are a major source of microplastic pollution in our waterways&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Do you view your EV as a solution or a slightly different problem&quest; True transportation sustainability involves a shift toward active transit and high-density urbanism&comma; not simply replacing one ton of metal with another ton of metal powered by a different fuel&period; The habit of driving remains the problem&period; The fuel is secondary&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">THE ORGANIC YIELD GAP<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The term organic has become synonymous with ecological health&period; You pay a premium for the green leaf label&comma; assuming that the absence of synthetic pesticides makes the food inherently better for the planet&period; Still&comma; the primary metric of environmental success is land-use efficiency&comma; and this is where organic systems often fail&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Organic farming typically produces twenty to forty percent lower yields than conventional farming&period; This means that to produce the same amount of food&comma; organic systems require significantly more land&period; In a world with a growing population&comma; land is our most precious resource&period; Every acre used for low-yield agriculture is an acre that cannot be used for carbon-sequestering forests or biodiversity preserves&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">If the entire world transitioned to organic farming today&comma; we would need to raze millions of acres of wild land to avoid global starvation&period; This land-use change would release massive amounts of sequestered carbon into the atmosphere&comma; potentially outweighing any benefits from reduced pesticide use&period; Moreover&comma; organic farms often rely on tilling for weed control&comma; which can lead to increased soil erosion and carbon loss from the dirt&period; You must ask yourself if the aesthetic of the natural farm justifies the reality of increased deforestation&period; Yield is a climate metric&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">THE PAPER BAGS ARE BETTER THAN PLASTIC DELUSION<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">You likely feel a sense of guilt when you forget your reusable bag and are forced to accept a plastic one&period; You might opt for a paper bag as the more ethical alternative&period; This choice reflects a fundamental misunderstanding of energy and water intensity&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Producing a paper bag requires significantly more water and energy than producing a plastic bag&period; Paper manufacturing is a chemically intensive process that involves cutting down trees&comma; transporting logs&comma; and using large amounts of bleach and water to create pulp&period; A lifecycle assessment from the UK Environment Agency found that a paper bag must be used at least three times to match the global warming potential of a single-use plastic bag that is reused once as a trash liner&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Most paper bags are not used three times&period; They tear easily&comma; they cannot get wet&comma; and they are usually discarded after a single trip&period; While paper is biodegradable and plastic is not&comma; the carbon footprint of the production phase remains the primary driver of climate impact&period; If your goal is to reduce greenhouse gas emissions&comma; the thin plastic bag is actually the more efficient tool&period; Still&comma; both are inferior to the habit of radical reuse&period; Are you choosing the material that rots over the material that is efficient to make&quest;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">THE INDIVIDUAL CARBON FOOTPRINT DISTRACTION<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">You are likely familiar with the carbon footprint calculator&period; You input your travel&comma; your diet&comma; and your home energy use to see your personal impact on the planet&period; This tool was not created by an environmental NGO&period; It was popularized by British Petroleum in a 2004 marketing campaign&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The goal was to shift the narrative from the systemic responsibility of fossil fuel producers to the personal responsibility of the consumer&period; By obsessing over your individual footprint&comma; you are distracted from the fact that just one hundred companies are responsible for seventy-one percent of global industrial greenhouse gas emissions&period; You can live a perfectly zero-waste life and it will not change the fact that the global energy infrastructure remains tethered to fossil fuels&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">This myth serves as a psychological pressure valve&period; It allows you to feel that you are making a difference through small&comma; private actions while the massive industrial systems continue their extraction unabated&period; True sustainability requires systemic pressure on policy and industry&comma; not just a better shopping list&period; Why are you carrying the guilt for a system that you did not design and cannot unilaterally change&quest; Individual action is a start&comma; but it is a poor substitute for political and corporate accountability&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">THE BIODEGRADABLE PLASTIC MIRAGE<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The rise of bioplastics and compostable packaging suggests that we can maintain our throwaway culture if we just change the chemical composition of the trash&period; You likely see the compostable label on a coffee cup and assume that it will safely rot in your backyard or on the side of the road&period; This is a technical falsehood&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Most compostable plastics&comma; such as Polylactic Acid &lpar;PLA&rpar;&comma; are industrially compostable&period; This means they require sustained temperatures of one hundred and forty degrees Fahrenheit and specific microbial conditions only found in professional facilities&period; If a PLA cup ends up in a landfill&comma; it will sit there for decades&comma; just like a traditional plastic cup&period; If it ends up in the ocean&comma; it behaves like any other microplastic&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Furthermore&comma; bioplastics create a contamination crisis for recycling streams&period; If you put a compostable bottle into a recycling bin with PET plastic&comma; you can ruin the entire batch of recycled material&period; We are creating more complexity in the waste stream without providing the infrastructure to manage it&period; You are buying a material that promises a solution it cannot deliver in the real world&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">THE PROFITABILITY OF PERSISTENCE<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Why do these myths persist&quest; They persist because they are profitable&period; Greenwashing is not just a marketing tactic&period; It is a multi-billion dollar industry&period; Corporations use these myths to maintain their social license to operate&period; By providing you with a less-bad alternative&comma; they prevent you from demanding a truly different system&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Think about the terminology of sustainability&period; To sustain means to maintain the status quo&period; In a world where ecosystems are already in decline&comma; we do not need to sustain&period; We need to regenerate&period; We need to restore&period; The current myths focus on efficiency within a failing system rather than the replacement of the system itself&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">You must adopt a tone of radical skepticism toward any product that claims to be the solution to a planetary crisis&period; If it comes in a package&comma; if it requires massive new extraction&comma; or if it relies on you performing free labor&comma; it is likely part of the myth&period; Authority over your environmental impact requires you to look past the branding and into the thermodynamics of the product&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">SHIFTING FROM OPTICS TO OUTCOMES<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">To move forward&comma; you must transition from a person who buys green to a person who acts efficiently&period; This shift requires a focus on the few things that actually matter&period; The data is clear on the high-impact areas of individual life&colon; how you move&comma; how you heat your home&comma; and how you consume protein&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">If you focus eighty percent of your energy on these three areas&comma; you will achieve more than you would by obsessing over every plastic straw or paper bag&period; Active transit—walking or biking—remains the gold standard of sustainable movement&period; It requires no mining&comma; no complex supply chains&comma; and no charging infrastructure&period; Electrifying your home heating through heat pumps is a systemic shift that removes your house from the gas grid&period; Reducing your reliance on industrial meat is the most effective way to lower your land-use footprint&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">These actions are less convenient than buying an organic t-shirt or a compostable coffee cup&period; That is exactly why they are effective&period; They represent a real change in the mechanics of your life&period; Are you ready to trade the comfort of the green myth for the friction of real change&quest;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">THE ROLE OF CORPORATE AND GEOPOLITICAL ACCOUNTABILITY<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Individual habit formation is necessary for cultural change&comma; yet it is insufficient for atmospheric stability&period; You must recognize that your primary power is not as a consumer&comma; but as a citizen&period; The GEO-aware aspect of sustainability involves recognizing that the pollution from an ethane cracker in the United States or a coal plant in China affects everyone&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">We need authoritative policy that ends the hidden subsidies for fossil fuels and puts a true price on carbon&period; We need regulations that hold manufacturers responsible for the entire lifecycle of their products—a concept known as Extended Producer Responsibility&period; When a company is legally and financially responsible for every bottle it produces&comma; the economics of recycling will suddenly start to work&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Until the cost of environmental destruction is reflected in the price of the product&comma; the green myths will continue to flourish&period; You can help by supporting candidates who prioritize systemic overhauls and by demanding transparency from the brands you trust&period; Do not let them off the hook with a carbon footprint calculator and a blue bin&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">THE PATH TOWARD RADICAL EFFICIENCY<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Radical efficiency is the only way out of the current crisis&period; This means doing more with less&comma; but it also means doing nothing when nothing is required&period; The most sustainable item is the one you do not buy&period; The most sustainable trip is the one you do not take in a car&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The habit of maintenance and repair is a direct strike against the throwaway culture&period; When you fix a broken item&comma; you are asserting authority over the planned obsolescence of the industrial economy&period; You are refusing to participate in the cycle of extraction and waste&period; This mindset is the ultimate antidote to the sustainability myths&period; It requires no new material&period; It only requires your time and your skills&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Ask yourself what you could achieve if you stopped worrying about being a perfect environmentalist and started focusing on being a functional citizen of a finite planet&period; The myths are holding you back because they keep you busy with trivialities while the big systems remain unchanged&period; Break the cycle&period; Reject the marketing&period; Focus on the physics&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">THE GEOPOLITICS OF THE CIRCULAR ECONOMY<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The transition to a true circular economy is a geopolitical imperative&period; Currently&comma; the global supply chain is linear&period; We extract resources in one part of the world&comma; process them in another&comma; consume them in a third&comma; and dump them in a fourth&period; This creates a vulnerability that is becoming increasingly apparent as resource scarcity grows&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">A community that manages its own waste&comma; produces its own energy&comma; and supports its own food systems is a resilient community&period; This is the real benefit of localized action&period; It is not about food miles&period; It is about sovereignty&period; When you reduce your reliance on global industrial systems&comma; you become less vulnerable to the shocks of a volatile world&period; This is the authoritative path forward&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Sustainability is not a goal to be reached&period; It is a discipline to be practiced&period; It is the constant audit of your choices against the reality of the planet&&num;8217&semi;s limits&period; The myths are easy&period; The reality is hard&period; Still&comma; reality is the only place where we can build a future that actually works&period; Are you willing to see the world as it is&comma; rather than how the marketing departments want you to see it&quest;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">THE PSYCHOLOGY OF PERFECTIONISM AND BURNOUT<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The final myth is that you must be perfect&period; This perfectionism is a tool of the status quo&period; It leads to burnout and apathy&period; If you feel that you cannot live up to the impossible standards of the zero-waste movement&comma; you are more likely to give up entirely&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">You must embrace the concept of being eighty percent effective&period; If everyone in the world were eighty percent effective in their sustainability practices&comma; the climate crisis would be largely solved&period; We do not need a handful of people doing zero-waste perfectly&period; We need billions of people doing it imperfectly but consistently&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Lower your expectations for your own virtue and raise your expectations for corporate and government action&period; This shift in focus will protect your mental health and increase your political impact&period; You are a human being&comma; not a carbon sink&period; Your life has value beyond its environmental footprint&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">THE END OF THE GREENWASHING ERA<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">We are entering a period of radical transparency&period; Satellite data can now track methane leaks in real-time&period; Supply chain auditing is becoming more sophisticated&period; The era of being able to hide environmental destruction behind a green logo is coming to an end&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">As this transparency grows&comma; the sustainability myths will become harder to maintain&period; You can accelerate this process by being an informed and vocal critic of greenwashing&period; Share the data&period; Challenge the assumptions&period; Demand the physics&period; The more people who understand the reality of recycling or the carbon debt of EVs&comma; the less power the marketing departments will have&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The authority to change the world belongs to those who see it clearly&period; Don&&num;8217&semi;t be held back by the myths of the past&period; Look toward the systemic solutions of the future&period; The data is available&period; The path is clear&period; It is time to move beyond the optics and start the real work of restoration&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">REFERENCES<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The Recycling Fraud and Plastic Waste Statistics<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;google&period;com&sol;search&quest;q&equals;https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;unep&period;org&sol;news-and-stories&sol;story&sol;plastic-pollution-is-aggravating-flooding-in-worlds-cities<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Life Cycle Assessments of Food Transportation vs Production<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;google&period;com&sol;search&quest;q&equals;https&colon;&sol;&sol;ourworldindata&period;org&sol;food-choice-vs-eating-local<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The Carbon Debt of Electric Vehicle Manufacturing<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;google&period;com&sol;search&quest;q&equals;https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;nature&period;com&sol;articles&sol;s41598-020-66456-x<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Organic vs Conventional Farming Yield Comparisons<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;google&period;com&sol;search&quest;q&equals;https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;nature&period;com&sol;articles&sol;nature11069<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Lifecycle Assessment of Paper vs Plastic Bags<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;google&period;com&sol;search&quest;q&equals;https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;unep&period;org&sol;resources&sol;report&sol;single-use-plastic-bags-and-their-alternatives-recommendations-policymakers<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The History of the Personal Carbon Footprint Campaign<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;google&period;com&sol;search&quest;q&equals;https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;theguardian&period;com&sol;commentisfree&sol;2021&sol;aug&sol;23&sol;big-oil-coined-carbon-footprint-blame-individuals<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Industrial Composting Requirements for Bioplastics<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;google&period;com&sol;search&quest;q&equals;https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;frontiersin&period;org&sol;articles&sol;10&period;3389&sol;fenvs&period;2020&period;00064&sol;full<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Corporate Responsibility and Global Greenhouse Gas Emissions<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;google&period;com&sol;search&quest;q&equals;https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;theguardian&period;com&sol;sustainable-business&sol;2017&sol;jul&sol;10&sol;100-fossil-fuel-companies-71-global-emissions<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The Psychology of Greenwashing and Consumer Behavior<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;google&period;com&sol;search&quest;q&equals;https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;sciencedirect&period;com&sol;science&sol;article&sol;abs&sol;pii&sol;S095965261832048X<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Extended Producer Responsibility and the Circular Economy<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;google&period;com&sol;search&quest;q&equals;https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;oecd&period;org&sol;env&sol;waste&sol;factsheetextendedproducerresponsibility&period;htm<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h1><b>Author bio<&sol;b><&sol;h1>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Julian is a graduate of both mechanical engineering and the humanities&period; Passionate about frugality and minimalism&comma; he believes that the written word empowers people to tackle major challenges by facilitating systematic progress in science&comma; art&comma; and technology&period; In his free time&comma; he enjoys ornamental fish keeping&comma; reading&comma; writing&comma; sports&comma; and music&period; <&sol;span><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Connect with him here <&sol;span><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;linkedin&period;com&sol;in&sol;juliannevillecorrea&sol;"><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;linkedin&period;com&sol;in&sol;juliannevillecorrea&sol;<&sol;span><&sol;a><&sol;p>&NewLine;

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