Daily Observer (Jamaica)

IDB wants to reduce plastic use in Latin America, Caribbean

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WASHINGTON, DC, USA (CMC) – The Inter-american Developmen­t Bank (IDB) has launched an Open Innovation Challenge that seeks to find the most innovative solutions that substantia­lly reduce or eliminate single-use plastic and plastic waste in Latin America and the Caribbean.

“Plastics have changed industries across the globe from medicine to food and are ubiquitous in our daily lives. However, plastics have had immense adverse impacts on human and environmen­tal health,” the IDB said in a statement.

It said that the production of plastics from fossil fuels is the second largest and fastest growing contributo­r to industrial greenhouse gas emissions, the primary driver of climate change.

“Worldwide, one million single-use plastic bottles are purchased every minute and five trillion single-use plastic bags are used each year, and only a small fraction are recovered. With the majority ending up in our environmen­t, plastic waste leaches toxic chemicals in fresh water supplies, soil, and marine ecosystems.”

The IDB said that the Latin American and the Caribbean region produces more than 400 million tons of plastic waste every year and 36 per cent of it is single-use plastic.

“This is creating economic, environmen­tal, and health problems for generation­s to come. How consumers, businesses, and government­s reduce or eliminate single-use plastic and plastic waste is a critical developmen­t issue,” it said.

The Washington-based financial institutio­n said that a number of countries in the region have instituted retail bans and taxes on plastic bags that have led to reductions in usage.

“Innovative methods of incentivis­ing neighbourh­oods have increased recycling, and mobile phone applicatio­ns are helping individual­s properly dispose of their garbage in the absence of formal waste collection services.”

But the IDB said although these are promising steps in the right direction, Latin America and the Caribbean are well-positioned to develop and implement new practices to substantia­lly reduce or eliminate single-use plastic and plastic waste.

“Plastic is everywhere. It floats in our oceans and it piles in the shape of mountains; we’re already eating one credit card worth of micro-plastics per week. Plastic is a global emergency, and we are facing one of the biggest challenges of our times: how to help countries and communitie­s generate a radical answer to this reality.” said Juliano Seabra, chief of the Innovation & Creativity Division at the IDB.

“With this challenge, we hope to inspire people with a strong passion for developing innovative solutions, to try to rethink the way we conceive plastic use.”

The IDB said that to reduce or eliminate the production of single-use plastic and plastic waste in Latin America and the Caribbean, the Inter-american Developmen­t Bank seeks innovative solutions that shift business models away from the use of plastics in packaging and transporta­tion; reduce single-use plastics and waste through promoting consumer behaviour change; and incentivis­ing reuse and recycling.

It said the solutions should also seek to enable the public sector, especially municipali­ties, to pilot and implement new and innovative systems in their waste management systems.

IDB said that 10 finalists will be invited to its annual meeting in Colombia in March 2020 and that the challenge offers US$60,000 USD in cash prizes, with a top prize of US$30,000.

“Additional­ly, the winning submission­s could be considered for a pilot project financed by the IDB Group, up to US$250,000, subject to due diligence and internal approvals.”

 ?? (Photo: AP) ?? A huge monster made of plastic recovered at sea and on the beaches by Greenpeace is pictured during an event organised by Greenpeace, on the Navigation Place Ouchy, in Lausanne, Switzerlan­d, Saturday, April 13, 2019. The NGO wants above all to denounce the pollution caused by single-use plastics that end up creating real continents of waste in the oceans.
(Photo: AP) A huge monster made of plastic recovered at sea and on the beaches by Greenpeace is pictured during an event organised by Greenpeace, on the Navigation Place Ouchy, in Lausanne, Switzerlan­d, Saturday, April 13, 2019. The NGO wants above all to denounce the pollution caused by single-use plastics that end up creating real continents of waste in the oceans.

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