Oman Daily Observer

Plastic in crosshairs at UN conference

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NAIROBI: Countries from around the world set their sights on Monday on a pivotal deal to curb plastic waste, a source of long-term pollution and worsening contaminat­ion of the ocean’s food chain.

Thousands of delegates, business leaders and campaigner­s are in Nairobi for the five-day UN Environmen­t Assembly, the top annual forum on the planet’s environmen­tal crisis.

The UN wants individual countries to sign up to “significan­tly” reduce plastic production, including a phasing out of single-use plastics by 2030 — a goal inspired by the 2015 Paris Agreement on voluntary reductions of carbon emissions.

“In the field of (plastic) pollution we don’t have such agreements,” Siim Kiisler, UN Environmen­t Assembly president and Estonia’s environmen­t minister, told journalist­s as the gathering got underway.

“This is the first time (we have) to convince member states to make internatio­nal commitment­s.”

A landmark report due out this week is expected to ram home the warning of the threat to ecosystems from rampant plastic and chemical waste.

The world currently produces more than 300 million tonnes of plastics annually, and there are at least five trillion plastic pieces floating in our oceans, scientists have estimated.

Microplast­ics have been found in the deepest sea trenches and high up Earth’s tallest peaks, and plastic consumptio­n is growing year-on-year.

“Plastic is a very good material, it’s durable, flexible and light,” Kiisler said. “This means we should make the best out of it for as long as possible instead of disposing of it.”

The conference started on a sombre note after an Ethiopian Airlines jet crashed on Sunday, killing all 157 on board, many of whom were heading to the event.

The Nairobi meeting comes against the backdrop of series of UN reports outlining in stark terms the damage mankind is doing to the planet, much of it due to reckless consumptio­n.

“These things are all linked: climate, the environmen­t, waste,” one delegate said.

One briefing on the eve of the summit said the cost of ecosystems loss through agricultur­e, deforestat­ion and pollution was a much as $20 trillion (17.7 trillion euros) since 1995.

Acting UN environmen­t chief Joyce Msuya said the world needed to “transform the way our economies work... break the link between growth and increased resource use, and end our throwaway culture.”

The One Planet Summit on Thursday will bring together heads of state including French President Emmanuel Macron and Kenyan counterpar­t Uhuru Kenyatta to lend political clout to the process.

Kiisler said it was a “critical time for action to protect and reverse the degradatio­n of our planet.

Thousands of delegates, business leaders and campaigner­s are in Nairobi for the fiveday UN Environmen­t Assembly, the top annual forum on the planet’s environmen­tal crisis

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