Presence of 'Forever Chemicals' in Paper Straws Highlights the Inanity of Plastic Straw Bans
A new study from Belgian researchers found that paper straws had higher concentrations of long-lasting, water resistant "forever chemicals" than plastic or steel straws.

When Kamala Harris was asked about whether she'd support a ban on plastic straws during a 2019 CNN town hall event, the then-senator and presidential candidate briefly made a stab at appearing human and folksy by talking about how much she hated widely loathed paper straws.
"It's really difficult to drink out of a paper straw. If you don't gulp it down immediately, it starts to bend, and then, you know, the little thing catches it. We have to kind of perfect that one a little bit more," she said, chuckling awkwardly.
The deficiencies of paper straws notwithstanding, Harris nevertheless endorsed a ban on plastic straws as a necessary measure to protect the environment.
But as it turns out, even a perfected paper straw might not be a win for the planet.
A new study published yesterday by Belgian researchers in the journal Food Additives & Contaminants found that paper straws contained higher concentrations of poly- and perfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS)—more commonly known as "forever chemicals" because of how long they take to break down in nature—than plastic and steel straws.
PFAS are frequently used in consumer products and industrial processes, given their water- and fire-resistant properties. Their use is also controversial given that they can be toxic at high concentrations, and even small concentrations can accumulate in bodies and natural environments over time.
Dozens of states have already passed laws to restrict some PFAS. Similar, unsuccessful efforts have been introduced in Congress. The European Union has also considered banning them.
These efforts have done little to keep forever chemicals out of paper straws, however.
The Belgian study found that, of the 39 brands of straws tested, those made of paper and bamboo were more likely to have PFAS present. Paper straws also had higher concentrations of PFAS than plastic straws.
The study's authors said the inclusion of PFAS could be intentional, as the chemicals' water-repellency would be useful in preventing straws from turning into a pulpy mess when stuck in a drink. They also say that these chemicals could unintentionally wind up in paper straws as a result of PFAS use in recycling processes.
Whatever the case, the Belgian researchers argue that the greater presence of PFAS in paper straws could actually make them less environmentally friendly than the plastic straws they're meant to replace.
"These 'eco-friendly' plant-based straws are not necessarily a more sustainable alternative to plastic straws, because they can be considered as an additional source of PFAS exposure in humans and the environment (e.g. after degradation in landfills or through incomplete incineration)," write researchers.
They suggest stainless steel straws—which were found to have no PFAS—as the truly sustainable alternative.
To be sure, the harms PFAS pose to human and environmental health are the subject of ongoing research and scientific controversy. Their presence in paper straws is nevertheless a useful illustration that there are always tradeoffs and costs to environmental policies, even when one only cares about the goal of "sustainability."
Beginning in the late 2010s, plastic straws became a target of bans, boycotts, and consumer awareness campaigns because of their (incredibly minimal) contribution to the admittedly serious problem of plastic pollution.
Their prohibition would, it was thought, reduce plastic waste getting into the environment. But to the degree that these bans led people to substitute paper for plastic, all they've done is swap out some minimal amount of plastic consumption for increased PFAS pollution.
Is that a worthwhile environmental tradeoff? I'm not sure. I don't think that's a question something the people over at Straw Wars or the Seattle City Council (which passed the first straw ban in a major city) ever asked themselves.
Should we perhaps replace paper and plastic straws with steel ones, as the authors of the Belgian study suggest?
That would cut down on both PFAS and plastic pollution. On the other hand, the manufacture and transportation of heavier steel straws would surely increase greenhouse gas emissions. Are less plastic and fewer forever chemicals worth more carbon in the atmosphere?
These environmental tradeoffs don't even touch the other costs of plastic straw and bag bans, in terms of higher costs for businesses, less convenience for consumers, and less choice for everyone. Once you start roping those factors in, the scales start to lean pretty heavily indeed against plastic straw bans.
The straw-banning fervor of the 2010s seems a little silly in retrospect. (Perhaps that's why Kamala Harris was awkwardly laughing through her answer in that CNN town hall?)
Nevertheless, there have been some revisionist defenses of these bans as of late.
Environmentalist magazine Grist argued these bans succeeded as a "gateway" ban. The loss of ubiquitous plastic straws got people to wake up to all the expendable plastic items that governments could easily ban. Seemingly performative straw bans beget bans and restrictions on plastic forks, plates, and ketchup packets.
As it turns out, expanding straw bans to other peripheral plastic items hasn't, in fact, arrested global plastic production.
If anything, these bans just spread the very unproductive idea that governments can address large environmental problems by banning straws, forks, or whatever else. Focusing on individual items is failing on its own terms. It's also blinding people to potentially serious tradeoffs as well.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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There was also the fact that the whole idea that plastic straws were creating any sort of negative environmental impact was based on a grade school science fair project by a 9-year-old.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2018/07/18/anti-straw-movement-based-unverified-statistic-500-million-day/750563002/
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So the greenies were grasping at straws using this.
They suggest stainless steel straws—which were found to have no PFAS—as the truly sustainable alternative.
Wait, ‘No straws, like a fucking adult.’ isn’t sustainable?
I guess this is the kind of inbred retardation you get when abstinence is no longer the best policy.
But California is in a drought, or pretending to be, even after announcing that the actual drought is "over" for this year and maybe next until the effects of El Nino fade and we're back to what should be called "normal" by the planners but instead is called "drought".
Imagine how much water will get consumed by washing and sanitizing all those steel straws!!! Or else, just imagine all the unchecked spread of Covid that could come from inadequate washing of re-usable items like that (if the panic over Covid ever ends, we might get to worrying about a disease that's actually dangerous, but that's not how Cali rolls these days).
At least the straws being paper will make it easy for the manufacturers to print the required Prop 65 warnings up the sides of them.
Legislated religion. Will it ever stop?
"I have 'faith' that plastic straws will end the world as we know it."
Legislators mandate the 'environmentalist' religion.
If it's not plain reality (proven to be consistent and predictable) then it's just a religion. And after 50-years of 5,10,15-year end of the world as we know it predictions it goes from religious 'faith' to drop dead stupidity.
Were there really adults who believed the "500 million plastic straws per day" nonsense?
That's an interesting conundrum. Are they actually adults if they believed the "500 million plastic straws per day" nonsense? Or are they just old children?
Or they are just overly aggressive gov-gun toting wannabe power-mad dictators that'll use absolutely **any-excuse** they can. Including chicken-little-sh*t cries of, "They sky is falling down!".
Britschgi has fallen for the latest addition to the arsenal of paranoia: Fear of inert materials. Forty years after the Teflon Presidency, the chemically illiterate Left has focused on perhaps the least toxic compounds ever devised by man.
Perfluorocarbons don’t react with much of anything short of glowing charcoal, and are biologically inert to the point of absurdity. They are arguably less toxic than water, as you can breathe them ;
You can’t drown a mouse in oxygen-saturated perfluorocarbon fluids.
Exactly. That’s what makes them ‘forever chemicals’; they are inert.
However, that’s only for perfluorocarbons. Partially fluorinated materials have higher reactivity.
But they can still be sharp. And animals can get stuck in them and suffocate.
In the inert chemicals?
How does that work?
Yea, and liberal AF Minnesota, is spearheading the legislative ban.
Never mind that Minnesota is the home of 3M - Scotchgard anyone?
Another study out of Belgium that makes the left look like they're getting it wrong? A few more years of this, and the "elites" will have to doublethink their way into believing that Europe basically Wyoming with different accents and that the whole continent is run by "anti-science" troglodytes.
There's almost nothing happening in any Scandinavian country policy-wise that the US Left would still consider a good idea. School Choice, Significant taxation on more than half the population, refusing puberty blockers to minors unless they've been through rigorous diagnostic and therapeutic mental treatment to filter the small number of actual "trans" individuals from the larger portion destined to simply be homosexual as adults. About the only thing that's left for our left to admire is the unwillingness to agressively deal with islamist fundamentalists or to call their attacks on Jewish targets ethnically based.
Based on another middle school science paper?
I'd ban paper straws just because they get soggy.
The straw bullshit is just signaling compliance with eco-shysters, as CA will do every single time. Even if it’s proven that there’s zero benefit, or actual harm, the single political party that owns CA will just double down, every single time. I’m surprised they haven’t banned Ziploc bags yet.
Not surprisingly, this information has not been reported in the Washington Post yet.
Christianity and Islam have nothing on the religious zealotry of the climate change cult.
Doomsday cults have a strong draw for some reason.
If you believe that global warming (or cooling, or climate change, or whatever) is some imminent calamity for which humans are to blame, then I am 100% for a law that compels you to consume all meals and drinks through these straws. And only these straws.
Be the change you want to see, environmentalists.
Giving looters of both factions the initiation of force their Kleptocracy cohorts push is not a bad idea... until it leaks into the majority who do not vote and the minority with the sense to vote for genuine libertarian candidates. Romans let lions and christians have at it while il popolo cheered from the bleachers, like soldiers in "All Quiet On The Western Front."
It's never been about the environment. Bloomberg stated when NYC passed it's ban on plastic bags, straws and utensils. It's a strike against "Big Oil". That's all it has been about. They are just carrying on the beliefs installed in them by the 60's and 70's Communists. In 1991 a team was sent to the old USSR to go through the KGB's records. It was found that many environmental groups received funding and direction from the KGB. When the team's full report came out a 75 year security moratorium was placed on it by Bill Clinton.
Five years ago, Starbucks recalled 2.8 million metal straws after a four-year-old's throat was impaled by drinking while running, and a British woman fell , fatally driving her stainless straw through her eye and into her brain.
The fallout included advisories warning against their use by children, or with a lid, in a car, walking, or in motion.
On the bright side there have been no reports of impalement of straw users by microplastic activists.
Walk on the beach and count the birds dying from paper straws. Come back when you get to "one." Paper straws burn nicely too. So why not scream "Climate Sharknado" next to "stable chemicals" to fan hysteria?
And, in other news... The EPA is moving to ban PFAS from water supplies. Not really proven to be as dangerous as they cite, it is extraordinarily difficult to filter PFAS from water supplies.
Maybe it's an agenda to make us broke? Ever notice how much your electric bill has gone up recently? Insurance in Florida anyone? Your monthly expenses without a mortgage are going to be unaffordable. What then? Donate your house to brown people because disparate impact or some such?
Yeah, "forever", stupid humans and their tiny lives