Depends on how you count and how you define "survival".
I am a big fan of plastic PET bottles. Now these come in two flavors: One type is wrinkled to make it easier to cram them together so they don't take up so much space in the trash or in the recycling bin. Bottled water is sold on these kind of PET bottles in many countries. The other kind is not wrinkled, and MUCH stronger, which make them more versatile. Carbonated beverages are often sold on this kind of container, and they are also used for non-carbonated drinks in some countries.
PET of the non-wrinkled kind is a fantastic material for all sorts of makeshift improvising. You cut it with a knife to the desired shape and then fold it so it fits. Finish with duct tape to hold it together. Voila, instant knife sheat. If you know how strong a curved shaped piece of PET bottle is then you'll see lots of uses.
I just used two 1.5 liters carbonated soda bottles to guard a paraffin lamp glass that someone will transport for me. Wrap the lamp glass in bubble wrap, cut off the top of each bottle, insert the lamp glass into one bottle and put the other bottle on the other end of the lamp glass. Tape together and we're done. Lamp glass is fragile stuff, but now it is fairly bump and squeeze resistant. Not good enough for airline transport, but good enough for being in the trunk of my friends car.
Now Dweste clearly said "plastic", so the discussion should not be restricted to PET. Generic plastic containers does have some of the merits of PET, but most plastics aren't as strong as PET.
Any container can be filled to hold anything that you can fit into the opening. Including those small tools and screws that you absolutely want to make sure you don't loose.
To make containers for slightly larger objects cut off the top part of two bottles, insert whatever into one of the bottles and insert the other bottle on top of that. If you can find bottles of slightly different sizes that would be helpful. This is what I use to protect the burner head of my optimus-00 stove. The flame ring gets very fragile due to the high heat, but now it is well protected during transport. For bottles of the same size just make a vertical slice on the bottle that goes inside the other bottle.
Fill it with sand or gravel (and possibly top it off with water) to make a weight to hold something down, such as anchoring the last flapping corner of a tarp.
For digging into loose material you can make a small shovel by cutting away about half of the bottle. Not good for hard packed dirt, though. I've cleaned plenty of ash using a small make-shift shovel made from a PET bottle.
Buoyancy devices - filled with air and taped together, or inserted into your jacket.
Or fill them with drinking water so you don't die of thirst....