The United Nations has launched negotiations on a "plastic reduction treaty," which is expected to become the most important green agreement since the Paris Agreement.
Last week, representatives from 175 countries around the world reached an agreement at the United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA-5) to begin negotiations on a global treaty to address the exploding growth of plastic pollution. Countries will develop a comprehensive, legally binding treaty to improve recycling and clean up global plastic waste, as well as limit plastic production. Measures such as bans on single-use plastics may also be on the agenda. Most significant environmental agreement since the 2015 Paris Agreement: According to the UN Environment Assembly, this global plastics treaty will be the most significant environmental agreement since the 2015 Paris Agreement. Negotiators will participate in the first of several rounds this year to gradually finalize the treaty's details, with the goal of completing the agreement by 2024. Any treaty imposing restrictions on the production, use, or design of plastics would affect oil and chemical companies that produce the raw materials used to make plastics, as well as consumer goods giants that sell thousands of single-use packaging products. The treaty would also impact the economies of major plastic-producing countries, including the United States, China, India, Saudi Arabia, and Japan. The sheer volume of plastic produced worldwide is simply incalculable. According to one assessment, the total amount of plastic ever produced is greater than the weight of all land and marine animals combined. The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) estimates that only 9% of it is recycled, with the vast majority designed to be used only once (the recycling symbol does not guarantee that it will be recycled).