Cape Breton Post

Halifax G7 to promote ocean plastics charter

‘We know plastic ... is literally choking our lakes and rivers’

- BY MICHAEL TUTTON

We know plastic ... is literally choking our lakes and rivers and we have to take steps to stop that or we’ll have more plastic pollution than fish by 2050.”

Federal Envinronme­nt Minister Catherine McKenna

A G7 ministers meeting in Halifax will promote the Canadian-led oceans plastic charter, with Ottawa planning to take the accord to the United Nations General Assembly, says the federal environmen­t minister.

The non-binding accord was agreed-to by five of the G7 leaders and the European Union at the G7’s Charlevoix summit in June, though neither the United States nor Japan have signed on yet.

But the agreement needs wider internatio­nal acceptance to stop the use of the oceans as open dumps, with over half of the waste coming from Asian nations who aren’t G7 members.

Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna said in an interview Monday the ocean plastics charter will be among the key features of the three-day Halifax gathering that begins Tuesday, as Canada wraps up its presidency of the G7.

“We know plastic ... is literally choking our lakes and rivers and we have to take steps to stop that or we’ll have more plastic pollution than fish by 2050,” she said from Ottawa.

The meeting will also see discussion around the rules for bringing about the Paris climate agreement’s goals for reductions in carbon emissions, she said.

In addition, the wide-ranging agenda includes discussion of measures to prevent illegal fishing, coastal adaptation to extreme weather and, on Friday, a gathering of G7 energy ministers that will include talks on clean energy.

However, the plastics accord discussion — occurring in a province that relies on a healthy marine environmen­t for fishing and tourism — has strong political appeal, say some observers.

“If they make movement on this, it will resonate well with the public and in other countries,” said Ashley Wallis, program director of water and plastics at Environmen­tal Defence.

Sad images of plastic straws and bags causing the death of turtles have become widespread in social media around the globe, while the Great Pacific Garbage Patch in the middle of the Pacific Ocean was recently estimated at 79 thousand tonnes of ocean plastic — about half of it comprised of lost fishing nets.

The charter’s provisions call for national government­s to set standards for increasing the reuse and recycling of plastics rather than trashing them. It also calls for businesses to take responsibi­lity for production methods that eliminate waste — an approach referred to as “extended producer responsibi­lity.”

Ottawa has yet to fully outline what its national strategy to reducing plastic waste will be, and what the broad goals of the accord will mean on the ground.

However, McKenna said she’ll have some announceme­nts during the meeting, as will Fisheries Minister Jonathan Wilkinson, who is expected to announce programs to reduce the amount of discarded fishing gear.

In addition, McKenna says an effort is underway to take the ocean plastics charter to the internatio­nal stage and gain more signatorie­s, both from countries and large corporatio­ns.

The cabinet minister also said in Monday’s interview that Ottawa is planning to present the accord at the United Nations’ 73rd General Assembly next week.

Despite a rise in recycling and composting in municipali­ties, Canadians remain among the most wasteful people in the developed world, with garbage being produced by households going up 18 per cent from 2012 to 2014, with 25 million tonnes of waste ending up in landfills that year.

A spokesman for the Suzuki Foundation has said the only measure that would make a major impact on plastic waste that ends up in waterways and oceans is “complete eliminatio­n of disposable plastic products.”

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