Nations call for strong plastics treaty as difficult talks loom
The talks collapsed in late 2024 with nations unable to agree on how to stop millions of tonnes of plastic waste from entering the environment each year.
Ahead of the next round of negotiations in August, ministers from 95 countries issued a symbolic call for a binding treaty that caps plastic production and phases out harmful chemicals.
"This declaration sends a clear and strong message: we will not give up," France's environment minister Agnes Pannier-Runacher said at the UN Ocean Conference in Nice in southern France, where the statement was issued.
"We must reduce our production and consumption of plastics."
So-called "high-ambition" nations have long pushed for the accord to include caps on the manufacture of new plastic, which is largely made from chemicals derived from fossil fuels.
An opposing group of "like-minded" countries -- mostly oil and petrochemical giants -- have rejected calls for production limits, and pushed instead for a treaty that prioritises waste management.
Mexico's environment minister Alicia Barcena said caps on plastic were critical "to send a message on the root of the plastic crisis" and recycling and waste management alone would not solve the problem.
In 2019, the world produced around 460 million tonnes of plastic, a figure that has doubled since 2000, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
Plastic production is expected to triple by 2060.
But just nine percent of plastic is recycled globally and every day, the equivalent of 2,000 garbage trucks worth of plastic waste is dumped into oceans, rivers and lakes.
"We are heartened to see this demonstration of ambition from the majority of countries, who are showing a united front against the small number of petro-chemical states trying to prevent a strong treaty," said Ana Rocha from GAIA, an alliance of activist groups.
The declaration also called for the elimination of "chemicals of concern" in plastics that are harmful to human health and the environment.
A treaty lacking these elements or based on voluntary measures "would not be effective to deal with the challenge of plastic pollution", they said.
Plastic pollution is so ubiquitous that microplastics have been found atop Mount Everest, in the deepest ocean trench, and in human blood and breastmilk.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Tuesday urged nations to "confront the plague of plastic pollution" and expressed hope the treaty talks would be concluded this year.
np-aag/jxb
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


UPI
an hour ago
- UPI
Slovenia becomes first EU nation to ban weapons to Israel
1 of 3 | On Friday, the government of Slovenia's Prime Minister Dr. Robert Golob (pictured Sept. 2024 at the UN in New York CIty) signed-off on its decision to prohibit the "export and transit of military weapons and equipment from or through the Republic of Slovenia to Israel, as well as the import of such goods from Israel into the Republic of Slovenia." Photo by John Angelillo/UPI | License Photo Aug. 1 (UPI) -- Slovenia on Friday imposed a ban on all weapons trading with Israel becoming the first European country to do so over the growing humanitarian crisis in the Palestinian enclave in Israel's ongoing war. Its government said in a statement that at the initiative of Prime Minister Robert Golob, Slovenia signed off on its decision that prohibits "the export and transit of military weapons and equipment from or through the Republic of Slovenia to Israel, as well as the import of such goods from Israel into the Republic of Slovenia." It added that Israel's actions had constituted "serious violations of international humanitarian law" and that Slovenia would prepare "some more national measures" in the "coming weeks," according to the statement. The prime minister's decision, according to the Slovenian government, stems from a promise to "act independent" if the EU "failed to adopt concrete measures" by July. "Due to internal disagreements and lack of unity, the European Union is currently unable to fulfil this task," the statement said in part. On Monday, a European Commission proposal to partly suspend EU weaponry aid to Israel was blocked as Sweden became the most recent to apply pressure over trade. Nearly 70% of Israel's arsenal is imported from the United States with Germany its second-biggest supplier and Italy at third. Slovenian officials have repeatedly called for a cease-fire and its government increased aid delivery to the war-torn territory. On Friday, it said people in Gaza are dying "because humanitarian aid is systematically denied to them. They are dying under the rubble, without access to drinking water, food and basic healthcare." Slovenia's government called it a "complete denial of humanitarian access" and a "conscious prevention of basic conditions for survival." Last year in June, Slovenia became one of the first in Europe to recognize Palestine as a state. Israel has exported more than $560 million in weaponry since October 2023 when Iran's terror syndicate attacked and took Israeli hostages. Italy, Spain, Belgium and the Netherlands have since either restricted or halted exports. This week, the Dutch government banned Israel's national security minister and finance chief from its borders. The foreign ministers of Britain and 28 other nations including Canada, France, Italy and Australia recently issued a joint statement saying Israel's ongoing war with Hamas in Gaza had "reached new depths" and "must end now." Qatar in March called on international leaders to bring Israel's nuclear facilities under the watch of the International Atomic Energy Agency. Chile's president has sharply criticized Israel's military actions in Gaza as the South American nation seeks to replace Israel as Chile's primary arms supplier. Golob visited the United States last year prior in October prior to November's presidential election. "It is the duty of every responsible state to act," the Slovenian leader's statement continued. "Even if this means taking a step ahead of others."


Boston Globe
3 hours ago
- Boston Globe
US must end its complicity in Israel's annihilation of Gaza
The American people do not want to spend billions to starve children in Gaza. Let me explain why these votes are necessary. Nobody disputes Hamas is a terrorist organization that launched a brutal attack on Oct. 7, 2023, killing 1,200 innocent people and taking 250 hostages. Israel had a right to defend itself. This debate is not about Hamas. It's about the United States. It's about whether we will abide by US and international law, or continue sending billions of dollars to an extremist government that has carried out terrible atrocities in Gaza. Advertisement Over the past 21 months, the Netanyahu government has gone far beyond defending Israel. It has waged a war of annihilation against the Palestinian people that has The toll on children is unspeakable. that more than 18,000 children have been killed, with more than 12,000 of them aged 12 or younger. More than 3,000 children have had limbs amputated. Advertisement Satellite imagery shows that Israel's indiscriminate bombardment has destroyed all structures in Gaza. The UN estimates that of housing units have been damaged or destroyed. Most of the population now lives in tents or makeshift structures, having been displaced repeatedly with nothing but the clothes on their backs. This combination of satellite images provided by Planet Labs PBC shows an area in Khan Younis, Gaza Strip, before, top, and after, bottom, crowds of people surround an aid convoy, July 26. Uncredited/Associated Press Gaza's infrastructure has been systematically obliterated. Most hospitals have been destroyed. More than 1,500 health care workers have been killed. Almost 90 percent of water and sanitation facilities are gone. Every single one of Gaza's 12 universities has been bombed. There has been no electricity for 21 months. The Netanyahu government has made this horror even worse through deliberate starvation. From March to May, Israel blocked all humanitarian aid — no food, no water, no fuel, no medical supplies — for 11 weeks. Since then, only a trickle of aid has been allowed in, nowhere near enough for a besieged population of 2 million. The result is predictable: People are starving to death. Children and vulnerable people are dying. Starving mothers cannot breastfeed their infants. Hospitals have run out of nutritional treatments, and medical staff are fainting from hunger. The UN World Food Programme reports that a third of the population hasn't eaten for multiple days. The UN-backed food monitoring group recently declared that ' Advertisement A boy strokes the neck of a donkey as they stand amidst rubble following overnight Israeli bombardment on the Japanese neighborhood in the northwest of Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on July 28, 2025. -/AFP via Getty Images Despite this crisis, Israel has replaced 400 established UN aid distribution sites with just four militarized sites run by private security contractors. These sites have become civilian killing fields. In two months, more than 1,000 Palestinians have been shot while trying to get food aid, with Israeli soldiers This is not military strategy. There is no military purpose to starving children. This is an effort to destroy a people. This is ethnic cleansing. Israeli officials have said so themselves. The Finance Minister The world is responding. France, Canada, and the United Kingdom are moving to recognize a Palestinian state. At the UN, 149 countries voted for a cease-fire resolution condemning the use of starvation as a weapon of war. American public opinion has also shifted. Recent Advertisement Yet the United States has provided over $22 billion for Israel's military operations since this war began. American taxpayer dollars are being used to starve children, bomb civilians, and support Netanyahu's criminal ministers. That is why I have repeatedly forced votes to block offensive arms sales to Israel. Our bombs have been used to flatten civilian areas and destroy UN schools. Our rifles have gone to arm a police force overseen by far-right, extremist minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, who was convicted of supporting terrorism and has distributed weapons to violent settlers in the West Bank. These sales clearly violate US laws prohibiting arms transfers to countries that kill civilians and block humanitarian aid. At a time when Israeli soldiers are Americans want this to end. They do not want to be complicit in an unfolding famine and daily massacres. Congress has the power to act — to use our leverage of billions in military aid to demand Israel end this slaughter. History will condemn those who fail to do so.


Washington Post
3 hours ago
- Washington Post
A map showing countries that recognize a Palestinian state and those that plan to
France, the United Kingdom, Canada and Malta announced plans this week to recognize a Palestinian state that does not yet exist . Nearly 150 of the 193 members of the United Nations have already recognized Palestinian statehood, most of them decades ago. The United States and other Western powers have held off, saying Palestinian statehood should be part of a final agreement resolving the decades-old Middle East conflict.