The Telegram (St. John's)

Plastic recycling in focus as treaty talks start

- VALERIE VOLCOVICI

As talks start this week on a global plastics treaty, debate is emerging between countries wanting to limit the production of more plastics and the petrochemi­cal industry favouring recycling as the solution to plastic waste.

Ahead of a meeting starting on Monday, many countries have said a goal of the treaty should be “circularit­y” — or keeping already-produced plastic items in circulatio­n as long as possible.

Coming into the talks in Paris, a 55-nation coalition called for a strong treaty including restrictio­ns on certain hazardous chemicals as well as bans on problemati­c plastics products that are hard to recycle and often end up in nature.

“We have a responsibi­lity to protect human health in our environmen­t from the most harmful polymers and chemicals of concern through the treaty,” said Rwanda’s environmen­t minister, Jeanne d’arc Mujawamari­ya, who is the co-chair of the High Ambition Coalition to End Plastic Pollution.

French President Emmanuel Macron said “there is no time to lose” on the issue.

“The aim must be to produce a text that everyone agrees on by the end of 2024, a year before the United Nations Conference on Oceans in Nice,” he said in a video message released on Monday.

The UN Environmen­t Program (UNEP), which is hosting the talks, released a blueprint for reducing plastic waste by 80 per cent by 2040. The report, issued earlier this month, outlined three key areas of action: reuse, recycling and reorientat­ion of plastic packaging to alternativ­e materials.

Some environmen­tal groups criticized the report for focusing on waste management, which they saw as a concession to the global plastics and petrochemi­cals industry.

“Real solutions to the plastics crisis will require global controls on chemicals in plastics and significan­t reductions in plastic production,” said Therese Karlsson, science advisor with the Internatio­nal Pollutants Eliminatio­n Network.

Under a new group, called Global Partners for Plastics Circularit­y, the industry has put mechanical and chemical recycling at the centre of its position.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A general view of the plenary room during the opening of the second session of negotiatio­ns around a future treaty on tackling plastic pollution at the UNESCO Headquarte­rs in Paris, France, on May 29.
REUTERS A general view of the plenary room during the opening of the second session of negotiatio­ns around a future treaty on tackling plastic pollution at the UNESCO Headquarte­rs in Paris, France, on May 29.

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