logo
Momentum sagging at U.N. plastic pollution treaty talks

Momentum sagging at U.N. plastic pollution treaty talks

Japan Times2 days ago
Talks on forging a landmark treaty to combat the scourge of plastic pollution were stumbling Saturday, with progress slow and countries wildly at odds on how far the proposed agreement should go.
The negotiations, which opened on Tuesday, have four working days left to strike a legally-binding instrument that would tackle the growing problem choking the environment.
In a blunt midway assessment, talks chair Luis Vayas Valdivieso warned the 184 countries negotiating at the United Nations that they had to get shifting to get a deal.
"Progress made has not been sufficient," Vayas told delegates.
"A real push to achieve our common goal is needed," the Ecuadoran diplomat said, adding that Thursday was not a just deadline but "a date by which we must deliver.
"Some articles still have unresolved issues and show little progress towards reaching a common understanding," Vayas lamented.
The key fracture is between countries that want to focus on waste management and others who want a more ambitious treaty that also cuts production and eliminates use of the most toxic chemicals.
And with the talks relying on finding consensus, it has become a game of brinkmanship.
A diplomatic source told reporters that many informal meetings had been scrambled together for Sunday's day off to try and break the deadlock.
"If nothing changes, we won't get there," the source added.
Countries have reconvened in Geneva after the failure of the supposedly fifth and final round of negotiations in Busan, South Korea in 2024.
After four days of talks, the draft text has ballooned from 22 to 35 pages — with the number of brackets in the text going up near fivefold to almost 1,500 as countries insert a blizzard of conflicting wishes and ideas.
The talks are mandated to look at the full life cycle of plastic, from production to pollution, but some countries are unhappy with such a wide scope.
Kuwait spoke up for the so-called Like-Minded Group — a nebulous cluster of mostly oil-producing nations which rejects production limits and wants to focus on treating waste.
"Let us agree on what we can agree. Consensus must be the basis of all our decisions," Kuwait insisted.
Nudging in the same direction, Saudi Arabia, speaking for the Arab Group, said the responsible way ahead was to start considering what bits of the text "may not make it to the final outcome due to irreconcilable divergence."
But given how little is truly agreed on, Uruguay warned that consensus "cannot be used as a justification to not achieve our objectives."
Eirik Lindebjerg, global plastics adviser for the World Wide Fund for Nature, said the Like-Minded Group's proposal was "another attempt to make it a waste management agreement", and to stifle talks on reducing the amount of plastic in circulation.
The U.N. Environment Program is hosting the talks and swiftly called a press conference after the stock-take session.
UNEP executive director Inger Andersen said a deal was "really within our grasp, even though today it might not look so."
"Despite the fog of negotiations I'm really encouraged," she told reporters, insisting: "There is a pathway to success."
Vayas added: "We need to accelerate. We need a better rhythm in this and we need to also work in such a way that it will be clear that we will deliver by the end."
Afterward, Bjorn Beeler, executive director at IPEN, a global network aimed at limiting toxic chemicals, said: "This whole process has not been able to take decisions and is still collecting ideas. We're sleepwalking towards a cliff and if we don't wake up, we're falling off."
Plastic pollution is so ubiquitous that microplastics have been found on the highest mountain peaks, in the deepest ocean trench and scattered throughout almost every part of the human body.
More than 400 million metric tons of plastic are produced globally each year, half of which is for single-use items.
Plastic production is set to triple by 2060.
Panama's negotiator Juan Monterrey Gomez took the floor to slam those countries wanting to stop the treaty from encompassing the entire life cycle of plastic.
He said microplastics "are in our blood, in our lungs and in the first cry of a new-born child. Our bodies are living proof of a system that profits from poisoning us."
"We cannot recycle our way out of this crisis."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Farm minister Koizumi visits rice field in South Korea
Farm minister Koizumi visits rice field in South Korea

Japan Times

time14 hours ago

  • Japan Times

Farm minister Koizumi visits rice field in South Korea

Farm minister Shinjiro Koizumi visited a rice field in a suburb of Seoul on Sunday to inspect the local rice farming situation. During the inspection in Paju, Gyeonggi Province, Koizumi received explanations from a rice farmer on market price trends and measures to combat high temperatures and pests. Speaking to reporters, Koizumi said rice prices in Japan doubling in a year, coupled with the rapid increase in rice imports from overseas, including from South Korea, "has led to anxiety among Japanese farmers." The minister emphasized that he would work to stabilize the Japanese rice market through the release of government-stockpiled rice and the policy shift toward increasing rice production in Japan. Exports of South Korean rice to Japan have increased sharply, reaching a record 416 tons in January to June this year, which is 26 times the highest full-year total logged in 2012, according to Korea Agro-Fisheries & Food Trade Corp. This is because South Korean rice, even with tariffs, can now be sold at around the same prices as Japanese rice. Koizumi is on a three-day visit to South Korea through Monday to attend a food security ministerial meeting of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum in Incheon, near Seoul. On the sidelines of the APEC meeting, Koizumi held talks with senior U.S. government officials, in which the two sides agreed to proceed with preparations for U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins' visit to Japan and Koizumi's visit to the United States.

Senior Chinese diplomat Liu Jianchao detained for questioning, WSJ reports
Senior Chinese diplomat Liu Jianchao detained for questioning, WSJ reports

NHK

timea day ago

  • NHK

Senior Chinese diplomat Liu Jianchao detained for questioning, WSJ reports

The Wall Street Journal is reporting that senior Chinese diplomat Liu Jianchao has been taken away by authorities for questioning. The WSJ carried the news in its online edition on Saturday, citing people familiar with the matter. The report says Liu, the head of the International Department of the Chinese Communist Party's Central Committee, was taken away after returning to Beijing in late July from a work trip overseas. It says the reason for his detention could not be determined. NHK has asked the Chinese foreign ministry for comment on the report, but has not received a reply. The 61-year-old diplomat has served in various posts, including as foreign ministry spokesperson and ambassador to the Philippines. He assumed his current position in 2022, and has frequently held talks with Japanese politicians including senior ruling party officials. The report on Liu's detention is drawing attention as another senior Chinese diplomat was removed from office two years ago. The then foreign minister Qin Gang was dismissed more than six months after he was appointed.

China detains senior diplomat Liu Jianchao for probe, WSJ reports
China detains senior diplomat Liu Jianchao for probe, WSJ reports

Japan Times

time2 days ago

  • Japan Times

China detains senior diplomat Liu Jianchao for probe, WSJ reports

Liu Jianchao, a senior Chinese diplomat widely seen as a potential future foreign minister, has been taken away by authorities for questioning, The Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday. Liu was taken away after returning to Beijing in late July from an overseas work trip, WSJ reported, citing people familiar with the matter. China's State Council Information Office, which handles media queries for the Chinese government, and the Chinese Communist Party International Liaison Department did not immediately respond to request for comment. Liu, 61, has led the Communist Party's body in charge of managing ties with foreign political parties. Since taking the role in 2022, he has traveled to more than 20 nations and met officials from more than 160 countries. Liu's busy schedule, especially his meetings with the former U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken in Washington, stoked expectations that the former ambassador and ministry spokesman was being groomed to be the next foreign minister. His detention marks the highest-level probe involving a diplomat since China ousted Qin Gang, its former foreign minister and President Xi Jinping's protege, in 2023 following rumors of an extramarital affair. Born in the northeastern province of Jilin, Liu majored in English at Beijing Foreign Studies University and studied international relations at Oxford before taking up his first post as a translator with the Foreign Ministry. He has served in China's mission to Britain and later as ambassador to Indonesia and the Philippines. During his time as ministry spokesman, he was known for humorous off-the-cuff comments while making a no-nonsense defense of China's interests.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store