Plastic straw ban discussed
PM SIDESTEPS QUESTIONS ON U.K. PROPOSAL
Canada will heartily endorse an international declaration aimed at cleaning up the oceans, Justin Trudeau said Thursday — but the prime minister stopped short of committing his government to a burgeoning push for an outright ban on the use of plastic drinking straws.
British Prime Minister Theresa May, who sat down with her Canadian counterpart the day before in London to discuss shared priorities, has set her sights on eliminating the ubiquitous utensil as a first step toward ridding the world’s oceans of so-called “convenience plastic.”
Cracking down on proliferating plastics and promoting the spread of LGBTQ rights largely dominated Trudeau’s first day at the Commonwealth leaders’ summit, which came on the penultimate day of a three-country tour that included stops in Peru and France.
The Commonwealth summit represents a rare opportunity for Canada’s prime minister to meet with and hear from 52 counterparts from six continents, most of whom share some type of link to the old British Empire.
This time around, it also allowed Trudeau to piggyback on what appears to have become a personal crusade for May, who declared at the start of the summit that she would launch consultations later this year aimed at eliminating plastic waste.
The plan would see Britain work with industry to develop more sustainable alternatives to drinking straws, as well as cotton swabs and plastic stir sticks to address what May described as “one of the greatest environmental challenges facing the world.”