The Problem(s) with Expanded Polystyrene (Styrofoam)

Styrofoam (expanded polystyrene) has been linked to cancer.

Styrofoam — or expanded polystyrene — contains the chemical styrene, which has been classified as a human carcinogen.

  • In addition to cancer, styrene has been linked to vision and hearing loss, poor memory and concentration, and an impaired nervous system.

How am I exposed?

When polystyrene is used for food packaging, chemicals can leach out into the food.

  • This is especially true when foods are hot, acidic, or high in fat.

  • A polystyrene cup used for tea, for instance, will trigger chemical leaching through heat and acidity. If milk has been added, the migrating chemicals will be absorbed by the lipid content of the milk, and made easy to ingest.

Expanded polystyrene does not biodegrade.

  • Plastics — including polystyrene — do not break down in the environment.

  • Over time, styrofoam becomes brittle and breaks down into microplastics. The process is accelerated by sunlight.

    • Polystyrene microplastics can reach every corner of the environment.

  • When styrofoam is placed in landfills, styrene leaches out into area waters, where it can contaminate drinking water.

  • In the ocean, styrofoam degrades slowly, and can be mistaken for food by marine animals. After substantial exposure, these animals show toxic effects.

Expanded polystyrene is easily littered.

  • Polystyrene is lightweight and breaks up easily. As litter, it is picked up by wind and travels from streets and through storm drains.

  • Once fragmented, polystyrene is difficult to collect, and can persist in the environment for centuries.

Expanded polystyrene cannot be recycled.

  • Like most plastics, styrofoam is made of a vast cocktail of chemical additives that give it features such as shape, color, texture, etc. These are extremely difficult to separate or break down.

    • The only technology that can convert polystyrene into anything other than trash is “chemical recycling,” an inefficient and highly polluting process.

      • “Chemical recycling” uses solvents and high heat to break plastics down to their chemical elements.

      • Chemical recycling is inefficient. It requires enormous amounts of energy to create a fuel that is dirty and toxic, and may often be used only to power the process of chemical recycling itself.

      • Chemical recycling facilities release toxic emissions, create hazardous waste, and are prone to fires and explosions.

      • After over 45 years of research and development, there are fewer than eleven chemical recycling facilities in the United States, all of which experience frequent shutdowns and are incapable of operating at scale.

    • The only chemical recycling facility in the United States capable of handling expanded polystyrene, Regenyx, in Tigard, OR, closed down in April, 2024.

We don’t need expanded polystyrene.

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So what can you do? You can work on passing a local polystyrene ban! It’s an effective way to reduce plastic pollution and help grow the movement against single use plastics.

See our resources below for tools and tips for getting your State or local government to pass a polystyrene ban.

MODEL LEGISLATION

You can download our model “Beyond Plastics Law” and use it as a starting point with your elected representatives. It is drafted to ban plastic bags, polystyrene, stirrers and plastic straws (except upon request) and balloons. We recommend doing all these items at once, if possible!

START A PETITION

If you’d prefer to limit your efforts to just polystyrene, you can use this sample petition language to start an online petition to raise awareness and put pressure on elected officials to act.

GET THE FACTS

Check out our handy Polystyrene Fact Sheet – available to download as a PDF.

If you’d prefer, we also have this fact sheet available in Spanish. Haga clic aquí para descargar en Español.


MORE INFORMATION

Like facts? (We do.) Want to arm yourself with more information? We recommend reading the two reports below to help you make your case:


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Chemical Recycling: A Dangerous Deception

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Plastic Bags