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View all search resultsThe global agreement on plastic pollution, which is expected to be produced on Thursday, will be a ‘point of no return’, which requires high commitment from all countries in order to eradicate the problem once and for all, according to Southeast Asian environmental activists.
nvironmentalists have been pressing Indonesia and other Southeast Asian nations to push for strong terms in a global agreement to eradicate the global scourge of plastic pollution, warning of the dire environmental and health impacts from plastic waste in the future.
Delegates and other stakeholders from 184 countries, including Indonesia, have been gathering in Geneva, Switzerland since Aug. 5 in a session of the United Nations Environment Programme’s (UNEP) Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee (INC) to develop an internationally legally binding treaty that would dictate how countries should work to tackle global plastic pollution.
The meeting marks the INC’s final series of negotiations on the treaty, which has been ongoing since mid-2022.
With the meeting nearing its final day, slated on Thursday, environmental activists from Indonesia, Vietnam, Malaysia, Thailand and the Philippines have been calling on their countries’ governments to make haste and reach an agreement that would prioritize the safety of future generations against the plastic pollution crisis.
“We urge delegates to remember the mandate: To end plastic pollution and protect human health and the environment throughout the full life cycle of plastics,” said Yuyun Ismawati, senior advisor of environment health advocacy group Nexus3 Foundation, in a statement on Tuesday.
Yuyun and other campaigners warned that Thursday would be “a point of no return” in the global effort to end plastic pollution.
“Limiting plastic production, controlling toxic chemicals and reducing subsidies for plastic producers are the only ways to meet this goal,” she added.
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