Rows of United Nations world flags outside UN building in Geneva, Switzerland.
Photo credit: Photo by Mathias Reding on Unsplash

Plastic pollution treaty talks end with no agreement

Negotiators failed to reach a deal on a global treaty aimed at curbing plastic pollution and plan to resume talks at a later date as disputes over production limits and toxic chemicals persist.

Jennifer McDermott reports for The Associated Press.


In short:

  • Delegates from 184 countries clashed over whether the treaty should cap plastic production or focus on recycling, reuse, and safer chemical use.
  • Powerful fossil fuel-producing nations and the plastics industry resisted production limits, arguing the treaty should prioritize waste management.
  • Negotiators released a revised draft recognizing the unsustainable growth of plastics and the need for a coordinated global response, but no consensus was reached.

Key quote:

“We are going in circles. We cannot continue to do the same thing and expect a different result.”

— Graham Forbes, head of Greenpeace delegation in Geneva

Why this matters:

Negotiations produced a draft that acknowledges the runaway growth of plastics and the global health and environmental risks — microplastics in oceans, toxic chemicals leaching into food and water, and communities burdened by mountains of waste — but it’s still just words on paper. The world is still waiting for leadership to turn concern into concrete action.

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About the author(s):

EHN Curators
EHN Curators
Articles curated and summarized by the Environmental Health News' curation team. Some AI-based tools helped produce this text, with human oversight, fact checking and editing.

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