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Groups seek to influence plastic pollution treaty talks at the UN as negotiations wind down

Negotiators face opposition from oil-producing nations as environmental and Indigenous leaders push for limits on plastic production in a treaty addressing pollution and health risks.

  • In the final days of UN talks, environmental and Indigenous leaders held signs Tuesday in Geneva, urging nations to agree on a strong plastic pollution treaty.
  • Amid rising evidence of health risks, nations are crafting the first global, legally binding treaty on plastics pollution, with a Mexico–Switzerland proposal targeting problematic products.
  • Tuesday’s sessions are ‘very intense’ as Camila Zepeda, lead negotiator for Mexico, said, and Juan Carlos Monterrey Gomez urged countries to prioritize citizens over big oil.
  • Amid debate, powerful oil-producing nations are strongly opposed to including plastic production limits, while Panama pushes for caps, and Monterrey Gomez said ‘We’re going to be pushing until the end.’
  • With talks nearing conclusion, Zepeda said there’s an appetite to finish, and the treaty is critical for public health at Geneva.
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53 Articles

Center

In view of the lack of progress in the negotiations on a UN agreement on plastic waste, more efforts are being called on from the EU.

·Germany
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Lean Right

Reusing plastic so it doesn't end up as waste in the environment is one of the hot topics at the United Nations' plastics summit in Geneva. It's uncertain whether an agreement will be reached there on Thursday. For several countries, the economic benefits of plastic outweigh the drawbacks. Senegal knows this dilemma all too well. In a large factory hall, right next to the port of the Senegalese capital, Dakar, a cacophony of humming and sawing r…

·Netherlands
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The Hamilton Spectator broke the news in Hamilton, Canada on Tuesday, August 12, 2025.
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