12 May 2019

United Nations plastic waste pact approved - but not by US

5:46 pm on 12 May 2019

Nearly every country in the world has agreed on a legally binding framework to reduce pollution from plastic waste except for the United States, UN environmental officials say.

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A man guides a raft through a polluted canal littered with plastic bags and other garbage in Mumbai, India. Photo: AP / Rafiq Maqbool

An agreement on tracking thousands of types of plastic waste has emerged at the end of a two-week meeting of UN-backed conventions on plastic waste and toxic, hazardous chemicals.

Discarded plastic clutters pristine land, floats in huge masses in oceans and rivers, and entangles wildlife, sometimes with deadly results.

Rolph Payet of the United Nations Environment Programme said the "historic" agreement linked to the 186-country, UN-supported Basel Convention meant that countries would have to monitor and track the movements of plastic waste outside their borders.

The deal affects products used in a broad array of industries, such as health care, technology, aerospace, fashion, food and beverages.

"It's sending a very strong political signal to the rest of the world - to the private sector, to the consumer market - that we need to do something," Mr Payet said.

"Countries have decided to do something which will translate into real action."

Countries would have to figure out their own ways of adhering to the accord, Mr Payet said.

Even the few countries that did not sign it, such as the United States, could be affected by the accord when they ship plastic waste to countries that are on board with the deal.

Mr Payet credited Norway for leading the initiative, which was first presented in September. The time from that proposal to the approval of a deal set a blistering pace by traditional UN standards for such an accord.

The framework "is historic in the sense that it is legally binding," Mr Payet said.

"They (the countries) have managed to use an existing international instrument to put in place those measures."

The agreement is likely to lead to customs agents being on the lookout for electronic waste or other types of potentially hazardous waste more than before.

"There is going to be a transparent and traceable system for the export and import of plastic waste," Mr Payet said.

- AP

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