Plastic pollution parley in Paris ??
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It’s all about the “Three ‘R’s” this week: reuse, recycle and reorientation of plastic packaging to alternative materials ?? as discussions around a global plastics treaty in Paris are taking place. And check out today’s ESG Spotlight for some continuity on the theme of plastic pollution as an artists’ latest piece serves as an “unflinching visual reminder of the urgency of this issue.”
With only about 9% of waste recycled from 460 million tonnes of plastic produced each year, the U.N.-organized Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee on Plastic Pollution aims for a legally-binding pact to eliminate more.?
The treaty negotiations in Paris, known as INC2, are taking place from May 29 to June 2 and are expected to result in key inputs for the first treaty draft ??, which needs to be done before the third round of negotiations in Kenya in November.
Many countries have said a goal of the treaty should be "circularity" – or keeping already-produced plastic items in circulation as long as possible ??. But many nations have different approaches to tackling plastic waste. Some major plastic producing countries like the United States and Saudi Arabia prefer a system of national strategies.
Some that have formed a "High Ambition Coalition," comprising Norway, Rwanda, New Zealand, the European Union and others, have called for a top-down approach ?? where global targets
"We have a responsibility to protect human health in our environment from the most harmful polymers and chemicals of concern through the treaty," said Rwanda's environment minister, Jeanne d'Arc Mujawamariya, who is the co-chair of the High Ambition Coalition to End Plastic Pollution ?.?
The U.N. Environment Programme (UNEP), the Kenya-based U.N. body which is hosting the talks, released a blueprint for reducing plastic waste by 80% by 2040. The report, issued earlier this month, outlined three key areas of action: reuse, recycling and reorientation of plastic packaging to alternative materials ??.?
UNEP estimates that government promotion of reuse options like refillable bottle systems or deposit return schemes could reduce 30% of plastic waste by 2040 ???.?
It also says recycling could achieve an additional 20% by that year if "it becomes a more stable and profitable venture" and fossil fuel subsidies are removed, and that the replacement of products like plastic wraps and sachets with compostable materials could yield an additional 17% reduction ??.
Some environmental groups criticized the report for focusing on waste management, which they saw as a concession to the global plastics and petrochemicals industry ??.?
"Real solutions to the plastics crisis will require global controls on chemicals in plastics and significant reductions in plastic production," said Therese Karlsson, a science advisor with the International Pollutants Elimination Network.
Meanwhile, the French capital’s Mayor Anne Hidalgo announced a plan to ban single-use plastic when Paris holds the 2024 Olympic Games ??, at a session of the International Forum of Mayors against Plastic Pollution which coincides with the treaty negotiations on the issue this week.
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In Conversation
Emmanuel Ladent, CEO at French biochemistry firm Carbios, shares his thoughts on the U.N. Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee on Plastic Pollution:
“80% of plastic produced globally is thrown away within a year. In 2020, European countries recycled on average 35% of plastic waste.
Plastic pollution remains a ticking time bomb. When 175 countries meet in Paris later this month to negotiate an international treaty, ambitious targets and clear incentives for plastic recycling must be set.
Currently, the primary bottlenecks are in the collection systems and recycling capacities.
Powerful industrial applications for plastic recycling exist and are close to becoming operational but clear targets on recovery rates
Recycling is a lever of the circular economy
The future treaty will be critical for mobilizing all actors along the industrial chain: from a product’s eco-friendly design
ESG Lens
Texas is emerging as an unlikely catalyst for energy transition efforts across the United States by rolling out clean energy supplies at a faster pace than long-time renewables hub California and the rest of the country.
Texas, the second-most populous state, has also established a formidable lead over all states in terms of total electricity generation from renewable sources, and will add more solar and wind capacity in 2023 than all other states combined, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA).
ESG Spotlight
Today’s ESG Spotlight continues to highlight the importance of recycling and waste management ??.
Lobbyists Greenpeace unveiled an art piece in Paris in the shape of a machine churning out bottles in front of an oil derrick to coincide with talks on eliminating plastic waste ??.?
Canadian artist Benjamin Von Wong said his 5-meter-high work by the River Seine showed the link between fossil fuels and plastic pollution, which could triple in the next four decades.
"We hope this machine will serve as an unflinching visual reminder of the urgency of this issue," Von Wong said, according to Greenpeace's website.
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