Jamaica Gleaner

Countries set to progress move to end plastic pollution

- - pwr.gleaner@gmail.com

COUNTRIES WILL have an opportunit­y to progress work on a legally binding instrument on plastic pollution at the upcoming Intergover­nmental Negotiatin­g Committee (INC-4), to be held at the Shaw Centre in Ottawa, Canada, later this month.

Plastic pollution remains a clear and present danger to human and the environmen­tal health, with some 19 to 23 million tonnes of the plastic waste reportedly leaking into aquatic ecosystems and polluting rivers, seas and lakes each year, according to informatio­n from the United Nations Environmen­t Programme (UNEP).

INC-4, to develop the internatio­nal l egally binding instrument, including in the marine environmen­t, is set for April 23 to 29, and will be preceded by regional consultati­ons on April 21.

The revised draft text of the instrument currently lists among the objectives ending plastic pollution, “including in the marine environmen­t [and other aquatic as well as terrestria­l ecosystems], [based on a comprehens­ive approach that addresses the full life cycle of plastic] [through the prevention, progressiv­e reduction and eliminatio­n of [additional]** plastic pollution] [by 2040] [and enhanced efforts thereafter], [in order] to protect human health and the environmen­t [from its adverse effects] [and to achieve sustainabl­e developmen­t]”.

Bracketing and asterisks reflect text that was added to reflect the input of members that was previously omitted from the final document issued on November 19 last year.

The current text also lists a number of options for the scope of the instrument and contemplat­es a range of issues, including the problemati­c and avoidable plastic products, such as short-lived and single-use plastic products; product design, compositio­n and performanc­e; movement of plastic waste across countries; as well as dedicated programmes of work to support the implementa­tion of t he instrument.

Meanwhile, the UNEP 2023 report, Turning off the tap: How the world can end plastic pollution and create a circular economy, has flagged the need to significan­tly advance work on the legally binding instrument, given what is at stake for people and the planet.

It also champions a particular approach to ending plastic pollution. In particular, it has proposed a so-called “systems change scenario” that accounts for not only the results of plastic pollution, but also the causes.

“Such a systems change will enable countries to turn off the tap and end plastic pollution, while at the same time transition­ing towards safer and more stable jobs for those currently working in the informal sector, and create business and job opportunit­ies,” the report noted.

Against this background, it has advanced three shifts in the usual way of operating, namely, to reorient and diversify; reuse; and recycle plastics.

Reorientin­g and diversifyi­ng, the report explained, is about achieving sustainabl­e alternativ­es, while making provisions for plastics that already exist, but which can neither be reused nor recycled.

Reuse is about accelerati­ng the market for reusable products “to transform the throwaway economy to a reuse society”, while recycling is concerned with accelerati­ng the market for plastics recycling by ensuring recycling becomes a more stable and profitable venture.

 ?? GLADSTONE TAYLOR/MULTIMEDIA PHOTO EDITOR ?? Jamaica, as other countries of the Caribbean and the world, grapples with plastic pollution.
GLADSTONE TAYLOR/MULTIMEDIA PHOTO EDITOR Jamaica, as other countries of the Caribbean and the world, grapples with plastic pollution.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? UNEP report 2023, ‘Turning Off the Tap’.
CONTRIBUTE­D UNEP report 2023, ‘Turning Off the Tap’.

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