I am doubtful, as the reason for doing so rests on the ability to understand the future harm that doing nothing will cause. We can feel the impact it would have today by making a change - less convenience and more cost. We cannot feel for years the negative impact of doing nothing.
We have that very same dilemma today with climate change. Look at how many people complain about the cost of moving to renewable energy. That cost we feel today. However, it’s the cost in the future, of dealing with a broken climate, that will be far greater but won’t be felt or paid for until the future.
I’m going to suspect the cost of dealing with the future health and quality of life issues of continued plastic use will dwarf the cost of moving away from plastic, but no one will want to do it. And it’s the same reason why we will complain about the cost of renewable energy and yet ignore the future cost of a broken climate.