Groups seek to influence plastic pollution treaty talks at the UN as negotiations wind down
Negotiations stall as over 100 countries back plastic production cuts but oil-producing nations oppose them, risking failure to achieve a legally binding global treaty, officials said.
- Representatives from 184 nations are convening in Geneva on August 13–14, 2025, to finalize a global agreement aimed at tackling plastic pollution.
- The negotiations are at an impasse because major oil and gas-producing nations, along with the plastics sector, resist limits on plastic production, while other parties call for regulations targeting harmful plastics and chemicals.
- The current draft treaty excludes an article limiting plastic production but includes provisions promoting sustainable production, improved waste management, and reducing problematic plastics.
- Greenpeace leader Graham Forbes said ministers must reject a weak treaty, while Pamela Miller of IPEN warned negotiators are "at the edge of a cliff" amid fears the new draft could be a "lowest common denominator."
- If no consensus is reached by Thursday, the process risks paralysis, threatening the goal of resolving the plastic pollution crisis despite visible pressure from activists and industry engagement.
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As the final week of the U.N. Global Plastics Treaty negotiations is being held in Geneva, Australian filmmaker and environmental advocate April Howard hopes that firsthand stories from the Pacific will support the negotiators who are pressing for stronger controls on the production, use, and disposal of plastics. While progress has been made since the treaty was first mooted in 2022, countries including the United States, Saudi Arabia, and Iran…
[NHK] A conference in Switzerland aimed at finalizing the first international treaty to prevent environmental pollution caused by plastics is scheduled for the 14th.
There are problems in reaching an agreement in international negotiations on a common global agreement on plastic pollution. This was announced by Environment Minister Magnus Heunicke (S) on Wednesday evening. He is present ...
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