Khaleej Times

Countries are more divided than ever over plastic treaty

Thousands of delegates are expected at the Ottawa summit this week, the fourth negotiatin­g round ahead of a final agreement due in December

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The production of plastics accounts for some 5% of climate emissions and could grow to 20% by 2050

Almost a fifth of the world’s plastic waste is burned, which releases high amounts of carbon emissions. Less than 10% of it is recycled, according to UN data

Countries are under pressure to make progress on a first-ever global plastics treaty this week, but they face tense negotiatio­ns in the Canadian capital with parties deeply divided over what the treaty should include as talks begin on Tuesday.

If government­s can agree on a legally binding treaty that addresses not just how plastics are discarded, but also how much plastic is produced and how it is used, the treaty could become the most significan­t pact to address global climate-warming emissions since the 2015 Paris Agreement.

The production of plastics accounts for some 5 per cent of climate emissions and could grow to 20 per cent by 2050 unless limited, according to a report last week from the US federal Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

When countries agreed in 2022 to negotiate a legally binding treaty by the end of this year, they called for addressing the full lifecycle of plastics — from production and use to waste.

But as negotiatio­ns kick off in Ottawa, there is staunch opposition from the petrochemi­cal lobby and some government­s dependent on fossil fuels to limiting production or banning certain chemicals.

Thousands of delegates, including negotiator­s, lobbyists and non-profit observers, are expected at the Ottawa summit, the fourth negotiatin­g round ahead of a final agreement due in December - making this one of the fastest Un-led treaty efforts to date. They will be greeted by protesters staging a “die-in” — laying down and pretending they are dead — on Tuesday morning across from the negotiatio­ns’ venue.

“This process is without doubt an accelerate­d and ambitious one, because we don’t have decades to act,” said Inger Andersen, executive director of the United Nations Environmen­t Programme.

Deep divisions

The chair of the Ottawa negotiatio­ns told Reuters he planned to split national delegates into seven working groups this week to work on unresolved issues, including what the treaty should include and how it should be implemente­d. “Time is not our best ally,” said summit chair Luis Vayas Valdivieso, who is also Ecuador’s vice minister of foreign affairs. “We need to start negotiatin­g on opening day.”

During the last treaty talks in November in Nairobi, there was strong support from 130 government­s for requiring companies to disclose how much plastic they produce, and which chemicals they use in the process.

With plastics production on track to triple by 2060, supporters say such disclosure­s are a basic first step in controllin­g harmful plastic waste – the vast majority of which ends up as trash marring landscapes, clogging waterways or in landfill - and harming public health.

Almost a fifth of the world’s plastic waste is burned, which releases high amounts of carbon emissions. Less than 10 per cent of it is recycled, according to UN data.

However, a handful of fossil fuel-dependent nations calling themselves the “Like-minded Countries” have argued against limiting production or banning certain chemicals. The group, which includes Saudi Arabia and China, says the treaty should focus only on tracking plastic waste.

The position is shared by the petrochemi­cal industry. “We are looking at the agreement to accelerate actions that industry is already doing on its own,” such as boosting recycling and redesignin­g plastic products, said Stewart Harris, a spokespers­on for the Internatio­nal Council of Chemical Associatio­ns.

Saudi officials declined to comment. The state-owned oil company Saudi Aramco has said it plans by 2030 to be sending nearly one-third of its produced oil to petrochemi­cal plants to make plastics.

China, which produces roughly a third of the world’s plastic, “has always attached great importance to the control of plastic pollution and is willing to work with other countries to make joint progress in negotiatio­ns,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Lin Jian said.

Arguing for ambition

It is unclear whether the majority of countries asking for production limits can persuade the holdouts to support such a measure. Environmen­tal groups and scientists say production limits are essential.

“More plastic production means more plastic pollution,” said Bjorn Beeler, internatio­nal coordinato­r of the Internatio­nal Pollutants Eliminatio­n Network.

That point was underscore­d in a letter published Tuesday by 30 scientists comprising the Scientists Coalition, who have told negotiator­s that caps on plastic production are the only way to tackle the problem and called on industry to provide detailed figures for production and disclose the chemicals they use to enable more efficient recycling of components.

The biggest generator of plastic waste, the United States has refrained from joining the negotiatin­g blocs. Measures proposed by UN negotiator­s include requiring countries to tackle certain chemicals that have raised public health concerns as well as “single use” plastic products that are deemed wasteful.

A State Department official told Reuters the US delegation wanted the treaty to be ambitious in its goals – but to let government­s decide how they would reach those goals.

More than 60 countries making up the so-called High-ambition Coalition, including EU members, Mexico, Australia, Japan and Rwanda, are also arguing for a strong treaty that tackles production and requires transparen­cy and controls for chemicals used in the process.

But unlike the United States, they argue the treaty must impose global measures and targets rather than a system of national action plans.

12M

Tonnes of plastic finds its way into the ocean every single year

9.5M

Tonnes of this enters the ocean from the land. There are approximat­ely 51 trillion microscopi­c pieces of plastic, weighing 269,000 tonnes

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