China Daily (Hong Kong)

UN urges more efforts to cut pollution

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OSLO — Less than a 10th of all the plastic ever made has been recycled, and government­s should consider banning or taxing single-use bags or food containers to stem a tide of pollution, a United Nations report said on Tuesday — UN World Environmen­t Day.

The study, billed as the most comprehens­ive review of government action to curb single-use plastics, said up to 5 trillion plastic bags were used worldwide each year. Spread out side-by-side, they would cover an area twice the size of France.

“The scourge of plastic has reached every corner of the Earth,” Erik Solheim, head of UN Environmen­t, wrote in the report, compiled with the Indian government and launched along with a slogan: “If you can’t reuse it, refuse it”.

“Only 9 percent of the 9 billion tons of plastic the world has ever produced has been recycled,” the report said. “Most ends up in landfills, dumps or in the environmen­t.”

But there are signs of action to limit plastic pollution, which harms life in the oceans, contaminat­es soils and releases toxic chemicals when burned.

“Targeted levies and bans — where properly planned and enforced — have been among the most effective strategies to limit overuse of disposable plastic products,” the report said.

Elisa Tonda, who leads UN Environmen­t’s Sustainabl­e Lifestyle program, said more than 60 countries had bans or charges on single-use plastics such as bags or polystyren­e containers.

The Australian government is working to cut down on waste produced by ensuring

trillion

that all packaging will be recyclable, compostabl­e or reusable by 2025 or earlier.

Half of Australia’s eight state and territorie­s already ban single-use plastic shopping bags.

Retail giants Woolworths and Coles, which account for around 70 percent of the Australian supermarke­t trade, on Monday announced new goals to reduce plastic products and packaging in response to customers wanting a greener shopping experience.

Thirty percent of countries found sharp drops in plastic bag consumptio­n in the first year after imposing restrictio­ns, while 20 percent saw little or no change. But in half the cases, government­s failed to gauge the effects of restrictio­ns, the report said.

Among its recommenda­tions, the report called for better sorting of waste and recycling, economic incentives to promote eco-friendly alternativ­es to plastics, education of consumers and promotion of reusable products.

The report also found other cultural side-effects.

In South Africa, plastic litter is jokingly referred to as “the new national flower”. In Ireland, windblown plastic bags caught in trees are referred to as “witch’s knickers”.

 ?? JAKE NOWAKOWSKI / NEWSPIX VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Artist Bryan Scanlon puts the finishing touches on a sculpture made of 1,580 tons of waste in Melbourne, Australia, on Sunday.
JAKE NOWAKOWSKI / NEWSPIX VIA GETTY IMAGES Artist Bryan Scanlon puts the finishing touches on a sculpture made of 1,580 tons of waste in Melbourne, Australia, on Sunday.

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