‘Moment of truth’ for world-first plastic pollution treaty

In 2019, the world produced around 460 million tonnes of plastic, a figure that has doubled since 2000.
November 22, 2024
white car parked near building during daytime
Photo by NIKLAS LINIGER on Unsplash

Plastic pollution litters our seas, our air and even our bodies, but negotiators face an uphill battle next week to agree on the world’s first treaty aimed at ending the problem.

Countries will have a week in South Korea’s Busan from Monday to round off two years of negotiations.

They remain deeply divided on whether the deal should limit plastic production and certain chemicals, and even if the treaty should be adopted by majority vote or consensus.

The talks are a “moment of truth”, UN Environment Programme chief Inger Andersen warned this month.

“Busan can and must mark the end of the negotiations,” she insisted, in a nod to growing speculation that the process could be extended.

She acknowledged that serious differences remain, urging “more convergence” on the most difficult areas.

“Everyone wants an end to ,” she said.

“Now it is up to member states to deliver.”

Read the full post at phys.org.

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