IPEN International Pollutants Elimination Network

UN plastic treaty negotiations end in failure, again

A story in Mongabay notes that representatives from 184 countries recently gathered in Geneva, Switzerland, to tackle the growing plastic crisis. The Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee meeting (INC 5.2) went into overtime but failed to produce an agreement.

Two main issues were supposed to be resolved by this, the last scheduled round of negotiations: whether the treaty should include a cap on the production of new plastic and how to address concerns about chemicals in plastic.

The U.N. meeting is consensus-based, “meaning that unless somebody rejects it, a potential decision would proceed. And all decisions for content did not proceed,” Björn Beeler, executive director and international coordinator with the International Pollutants Elimination Network, told Mongabay in a video call.

Following the collapse of the meeting, French environment minister Agnès Pannier-Runacher expressed anger, saying, “A handful of countries, guided by short-term financial interests rather than the health of their populations and the sustainability of their economies, blocked the adoption of an ambitious treaty against plastic pollution.”

Undeterred, Beeler said the push toward a plastic treaty is a marathon, not a sprint. He expects representatives to meet again but with a different process that can achieve results. “Consensus is dead,” he said.

“This is a problem that’s not going away. You can try to bury your head in the sand, but it’s just not going away.”

Read the full story here.