Fossil Fuel and Chemical Industry Lobbyists Dominate Plastic Pollution Treaty Talks

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ENVIRONMENT News

PLASTIC POLLUTION,INDUSTRY LOBBYISTS,FOSIL FUEL COMPANIES

At this week's plastics treaty negotiations in Busan, South Korea, the UN Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee on Plastic Pollution revealed that 221 fossil fuel and chemical industry lobbyists are registered to attend INC-5. This marks the highest number of industry lobbyists at any negotiation for the plastics treaty analyzed by Ciel.

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The analysis, based on the UN Environment Programme’s provisional list of INC-5 participants, comes midway in the final negotiations, during which a global plastics treaty is expected to be finalised. INC-5 marks the fifth and final round of negotiations. Lobbyists also outnumber the delegations from the EU and all of its member states combined as well as the 89 delegation representatives from the Pacific Small Island Developing States and the 165 from Latin American and Caribbean countries.

“Reports of intimidation and interference have surfaced, including allegations of industry representatives intimidating independent scientists participating in the negotiations and pressure on country delegations by industry to replace technical experts with industry-friendly representatives.

“ participates in the South Africa INC delegation as a government official,” said Peter Mbelengwa, the department’s spokesperson. “Both civil society groups and plastics industry/business have equal access to engage the South African delegation prior and during the INC sessions.” “The solution must begin at the source. We need a treaty that caps plastic production … A treaty that fails to limit plastic production at its source will not only fall short of its mandate to end plastic pollution, it will fail humanity at a critical juncture. To meaningfully address this crisis, a global reduction target must be paired with ambitious, binding national commitments.”

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