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Plastics pollution may be solved without production cap, says Canadian minister

OTTAWA (AFP) – The world may solve plastic pollution without insisting on a cap on its production – which environmental activists want but industry opposes, preferring more recycling – Canada’s environment minister said on Friday.

Speaking on the sidelines of negotiations in Ottawa on a global treaty to reduce plastic pollution, Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault said there are “a lot of things” being proposed “that could ensure that this is an ambitious treaty, whether or not there is a production cap”.

He pointed to the need to ban some single use plastics and doing better in areas of recycling, as examples.

“There’s no silver bullet here to fight plastic pollution,” he added, urging delegates to consider “the entire picture of where we need to tackle plastic pollution at every step of the way.”

Greenpeace’s Patrick Bonin reacted by accusing the minister of “undermining” efforts to negotiate a plastic production cap.

Negotiators from 175 countries are meeting to nail down a world-first UN treaty to address the scourge of plastics found everywhere from mountaintops to ocean depths, and in human blood and breast milk.

Plastics producers are pushing for more recycling while environmentalists want cuts to the volume of plastic produced, as annual production has more than doubled in 20 years to 460 million metric tonnes, and is on track to triple within four decades.

The meeting in Ottawa is the penultimate session before a final round of negotiations in South Korea in November.

PHOTO: AFP
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