-
'Curious' dolphin charms French town but experts concerned
-
Four dead after train hits school bus in Belgium
-
Ferrari unveils 'Luce', its first fully electric car, in a tough market
-
IS-linked women, children return to Australia
-
More climate records under threat as spring heatwave bakes western Europe
-
Brazil hope Ancelotti is the man to deliver their sixth World Cup
-
USA with all to prove in World Cup Group D
-
After AFCON drama, Morocco head to World Cup with big ambitions
-
Asia stocks fall, oil prices mixed on US-Iran deal uncertainty
-
Au so chic: Paris Mint to issue first solid-gold coins in a century
-
Ferrari unveils first fully electric car
-
Rubio revives 'Quad' with new Asia projects after questions on US
-
'Next time I'll stab you': Russia sees spate of wartime school attacks
-
Starbucks Korea reveals series of mishaps leading to 'Tank Day' campaign
-
Rubio revives 'Quad' alliance in India, but staying power unclear
-
Rubio says US ready to mediate as Moscow steps up Kyiv threats
-
Arsenal must banish European final demons to make Champions League history
-
Asia stocks, oil prices mixed on US-Iran deal uncertainty
-
Knicks sweep Cavs to reach first NBA Finals since 1999
-
Sonny Rollins, last jazz 'colossus,' dead at 95
-
Miserly Arsenal face PSG firepower in Champions League style clash
-
Brazil's World Cup challenge faces Morocco test in Group C
-
Panatta hopes Sinner can overcome 50 years of history at Roland Garros
-
'I think twice': Minorities fear World Cup immigration enforcement
-
Son of Libya's Haftar vows to make up for 'lost years' under Gaddafi
-
Cleaning the chakras of Ecuador's cats and dogs
-
Chile's once-dirty Mapocho river enjoys new lease on life
-
Rubio to revive 'Quad' alliance in India, but staying power unclear
-
War-hardened Kyiv residents return to routine after Russian strikes
-
US attacks missile sites in Iran, despite ceasefire
-
ESGold Signs Definitive Gold and Silver Dore Purchase Agreement with Ocean Partners
-
Specific AI at Silicon Valley's Startup Grind Unveils Global B2B AI Infrastructure Vision
-
Abasca Resources Engages Tetra Tech to Complete Preliminary Economic Assessment for the Loki Flake Graphite Deposit
-
Eagle Plains' Partner Sun Summit Approves 2026 Exploration for the Theory Project, Toodoggone District, BC
-
Jumia Shareholders Elect New Supervisory Board, Deepening African Expertise as Company Targets 2027 Profitability
-
SMX and the Age of Parity: Recycled Plastic is No Longer a Gesture; It’s How Modern Life Stays Affordable
-
Yunu Launches De-ID & Export to Simplify Site-to-Sponsor Trial Data Sharing
-
RapidClaims Earns Second Consecutive Black Book AI Claims Automation Distinction
-
North Shore Receives Exploration Permits for Rio Puerco Uranium Project and Announces Marketing Engagement
-
What Is the Best Weight Loss Clinic in Seattle and Bellevue?
-
Ryde Introduces RydePET XL and Enhanced Pet Travel Categories
-
American Critical Minerals Receives Final BLM Potash Prospecting Permits for 2026 Drill Program at Green River Project
-
Preparing the Market: What MoTA Is Meant to Solve
-
UraniumX Commences Drill Program at Murphy Lake
-
Star Copper Announces Early Season Mobilization and Drill Program Update at Star Project
-
InterContinental Hotels Group PLC Announces Transaction in Own Shares - May 26
-
MindMaze Therapeutics Announces CHF 8.0 Million Strategic Equity Financing
-
IS-linked group set to return to Australia, minister says
-
SCANDIC COIN: BingX, BitMart, L-Bank और Biconomy पर लॉन्च किया गया विनियमित वास्तविक-विश्व-संपत्ति प्रोजेक्ट
-
Canada's Carney calls treatment of Gaza flotilla activists 'unacceptable'
UN to agree on plan for 'historic' plastics treaty
More than 100 nations convening in Nairobi next week are expected to take the first steps toward establishing a historic global treaty to tackle the plastic crisis afflicting the planet.
Plastic has been found in Arctic sea ice, the bellies of whales and Earth's atmosphere, and governments have been under increasing pressure to unite in action against the global scourge.
Negotiators are hammering out the framework for a legally binding plastic treaty that diplomats say is the most ambitious environmental pact since the 2015 Paris Agreement on climate change.
"This is a big moment. This is one for the history books," Inger Andersen, head of the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), told AFP this week.
The exact scope of the treaty remains to be defined. There are competing proposals being drafted ahead of a three-day UN environment summit starting Monday in Nairobi.
World leaders and environment ministers meeting in-person and virtually are expected to kickstart the treaty process by appointing a negotiating committee to finalise the policy details over the next two years.
But more than 50 countries, along with scientists, businesses and environment groups, have publicly called for tough new regulations on industry to curb the torrent of plastic entering the environment.
This could include caps on the production of new plastic -- which is made from oil and gas, and forecast to double by 2040 -- redesigning products to make recycling easier or less harmful, and phasing out single-use items.
- 'Treaty with teeth' -
Many countries, including major plastic producers like the United States and China, have expressed general support for a treaty, but stopped short of endorsing any specific measures.
But there is broad consensus that countries acting alone cannot fix the problem, and a coordinated global response is needed.
Since the 1950s, the rate of plastic production has grown faster than any other material, vastly outpacing national efforts to keep the environment clean.
Today, approximately 300 million tonnes of plastic waste -– equivalent to the weight of the human population –- are produced every year.
Less than 10 percent is recycled, with most ending up in landfill or the oceans.
By some estimates, a garbage truck's worth of plastic is dumped in the sea every minute, choking marine life and befouling coastlines around the globe. Microscopic particles of plastic can also enter the food chain, eventually joining the human diet.
"It is not something that stops at the border. As we know from plastics in the ocean... your trash becomes my trash, and my trash becomes your trash," said Andersen.
In October, dozens of major corporations including Coca-Cola and Unilever said a plastics treaty with binding targets was "crucial to set a high common standard of action for all countries to abide by."
Environment groups remain wary and want concrete targets and enforcement mechanisms enshrined in any treaty to ensure accountability.
"We are looking at something that is legally binding and has consequences, and not just a treaty that people can sign onto.... but doesn't have the teeth to bite back," said Erastus Ooko from Greenpeace Africa.
- 'Ready for change' -
Some of the world's largest plastics manufacturers have also expressed support for a treaty, but say banning certain materials would create supply chain disruptions and hinder improvements to recycling.
Environment groups have warned that plastic giants would try to steer talks in Nairobi away from firm commitments intended to push companies into making less plastic.
Two of the treaty proposals adopt a "source to sea" approach: targeting not just trash in oceans and landfill, but also pollution caused by manufacturing new plastic from fossil fuels.
These proposals –- one sponsored by Rwanda and Peru, and the other by Japan -– have broad support and are being merged to reach consensus, said sources with close knowledge of the negotiations in Nairobi.
A third proposal from India -– which called for voluntary measures -– does not have wide support.
"I think the world is ready for a change in the way we relate to plastic," said Marco Lambertini, director general of WWF.
Th.Gonzalez--AT