It wasn’t going to be easy to find common ground among developed and developing countries, producers of plastic and those who suffer from its pollution. But it had to happen. The production of virgin plastic has increased from two million tons per annum in 1950 to 367 million in 2020. It is expected to surpass a billion tons annually by 2050.
The trend of plastic leakage into our environment has increased dramatically in recent years. About seven percent of the estimated 9.2 million tons of plastics that were produced between 1950-2017 is now waste. Three quarters of that has been dumped in landfills, or is accumulating into terrestrial and marine ecosystems.
There has been no one-stop solution to this crisis. The current regulations are fragmented and unable to meet the severity of the situation head-on. A combination of voluntary approaches and bans on selected items offer no match for corporate greenwashing and unabated plastic production.
The toxic legacy resulting from rampant overproduction of virgin plastics and their lifecycles is irreversible. But business-as normal cannot continue.
Bans are not enough
Two approaches were presented in advance of the negotiations. One was based on reducing production and consumption while simultaneously improving the way plastics are designed for increased reusability and recyclability.
The other focused on plastic pollution in marine environments and provided a limited scope of potential interventions.
After long negotiations, the former prevailed. It was clear that single-use plastic bans and waste management would not effectively change the course of plastic pollution and planetary health for good.
A promising start
Broadly speaking, NGOs were happy with the result, which shows that the narrative has moved beyond the narrow scope of considering the issue as “just plastic in the oceans”. It has now been officially recognised as a problem that spans the entire lifecycle of plastics and their impact on all environments and human health.
Each year, hundreds of billions of sachets are manufactured. They are so complex that recycling is difficult.
The mandate also includes language regarding sustainable production and use of plastics, product design, and the environmental sound management of waste.
A legal agreement could be negotiated that would monitor and reduce the production of virgin materials. At the same time, it would help to financially support developing countries and take steps to phase-out problematic products.
Now that the gavel has dropped on the decision to take this work forward, we are preparing for the challenging task of ensuring that ambition during negotiations remains both high and urgent. We are not yet out the woods, however, we have the map.
Christina Dixon is the Environmental Investigation Agency’s Deputy Ocean Campaign Leader. She has been a campaigner since 2013, and has been focusing on plastics, pollution from fisheries, and other issues.