The Hindu - International

Plastic treaty talks conclude in Ottawa with little progress

A a public art installati­on outside a United Nations conference on plastics, in Ottawa, Ontario.

- Jacob Koshy

Activist and environmen­talist groups have termed the Global Plastics Treaty negotiatio­ns that concluded in Ottawa, Canada, on Tuesday as “disappoint­ing”. Nearly 192 member countries deliberate­d for nearly a week to iron out a legally binding agreement to “end plastic pollution”. This was the fourth round of talks since countries resolved in 2022 to eliminate plastics and formed an Intergover­nmental Negotiatin­g

Committee (INC), which consisted of government representa­tives tasked with drawing up a timeline for countries to not only eliminate plastic use but also halt production.

However the close connection between plastics and the oil economies of prominent countries, the vast manufactur­ing businesses that revolve around making and supplying di„erent grades of plastics, the near ubiquity of the polymer’s use in a variety of applicatio­ns and the paucity of a„ordable, equivalent alternativ­es constitute the biggest roadblocks to its eliminatio­n. Because plastics do not easily degrade organicall­y, they pollute marine and terrestria­l ecosystems and have been long characteri­sed as among the toughest environmen­tal contaminan­ts.

“The INC has once again failed to ask the most fundamenta­l question to the success of the future treaty: how do we tackle the unsustaina­ble production of plastics?” said Jacob Kean-Hammerson, Environmen­tal Investigat­ion Agency, United Kingdom and who was present at the talks.

The fourth round of talks was expected to deliver a timeline whereby primary plastic production was to halt. This didn’t happen, though countries agreed to move forward with and come up with more detailed assessment­s of emissions,

The close connection between plastics and the oil economies of prominent countries constitute­s the biggest roadblock to its eliminatio­n

production, product design, waste management, problemati­c and avoidable plastics, “nancing, and a just transition.

“We came to Ottawa to advance the text and with the hope that members would agree on the inter-sessional work required to make even greater progress ahead of INC-5. We leave Ottawa having achieved both goals and a clear path to landing an ambitious deal in Busan ahead of us,” said Inger Andersen, Executive Director of the UN Environmen­t Programme (UNEP). “The work, however, is far from over. The plastic pollution crisis continues to engulf the world and we have just a few months left before the end of year deadline agreed upon in 2022,” she noted.

Inter-sessional work is expert meetings that take place between the o˜cial INC sessions and expected to catalyse agreement on key issues. The next meeting, expected to be the “nal one , is scheduled for November 2024 in Busan, South Korea.

“India opposed restrictio­ns on producing so called primary plastic polymers or virgin plastics, arguing that production reductions exceed the scope of UNEA [United Nations Environmen­t Assembly] resolution­s. While acknowledg­ing the chemicals used in plastic manufactur­ing, India highlighte­d that some are already subject to prohibitio­n or regulation.

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AP

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