UN proposes global treaty to fight plastic pollution

By Fatima Saka

The United Nations member countries have proposed a binding global treaty to curb plastic pollution. The proposed treaty, the U.N. Environment Assembly, will hold on Feb. 28 to March 2 in Kenya’s capital Nairobi.

The treaty is to propose an international framework to address the growing problem of plastic waste in the world’s oceans, rivers and landscape.

According to U.N. Environment Program Executive Director Inger Andersen, said “For the first time in history, we are seeing unprecedented global momentum to tackle the plague of plastic pollution”.

However, during his preparations for the session, Andersen implored member states to take the opportunity to reshape humanity’s “relationship with plastic once and for all” by developing a comprehensive global agreement to combat the problem.

The two major proposals have emerged during years of international discussions about ways to reduce single-use plastic.

The first, by Peru and Rwanda, calls for a full spectrum approach to plastic pollution, covering raw materials extraction, plastic production, as well as plastic use and disposal. It urges creation of “an international legally binding agreement … to prevent and reduce plastic pollution in the environment, including micro plastics.”

The proposal is co-sponsored by Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Guinea, Kenya, Madagascar, Norway, the Philippines, Senegal, Switzerland, the United Kingdom and Uganda along with the European Union.

Also the second proposal, sponsored by Japan, calls for an international agreement “to address marine plastic pollution covering the whole life cycle and promoting resource efficiency and circular economy,” including reuse.

The key difference is that Japan’s approach concentrates on marine plastic pollution, while the Peru-Rwanda proposal covers plastic pollution in all environments.

The proposals envision establishment of a negotiating committee to complete the new plastic treaty by 2024.

Such that if plastics treaty is endorsed by the U.N. Environment Assembly, Andersen said it “would be the most significant global; environmental governance decision since the Paris (Climate) Agreement in 2015.”

The environmental group Greenpeace supports the Peru-Rwanda proposal’s full lifecycle approach to addressing plastic pollution.

“Over 140 countries have declared support for opening negotiations on a global plastic treaty,” said Erastus Ooko, the plastics engagement lead for Greenpeace Africa.

“However, support for negotiations is not enough,” Ooko said. “These countries should be calling for a legally binding treaty that will match the scale and depth of the plastics crisis.”

plastic pollutionUnited Nations
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