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In the lead-up to UNEA-5.2, the majority of UN Member States had expressed their support for advancing a global treaty. [18] Other groups making public declarations about the need for a treaty include the business sector, [19] civil society, Indigenous Peoples, [20] workers, trade unions, [21] waste pickers [22] and scientists. [23] [24]
Countries negotiating a global treaty to curb plastic pollution have failed to reach agreement, with more than 100 nations wanting to cap production while a handful of oil-producers were prepared ...
Negotiations to draft a legally binding treaty to tackle the global plastic pollution crisis have ended without an agreement, as countries failed to agree on key issues like cutting plastic ...
Plastic pollutes oceans, food, your body. Yet nations are divided over a global treaty. Why all eyes are on talks for a U.N.-led accord to cut plastic waste.
This November, our governments face a historic moment to tackle a pressing global challenge. A UN treaty to end plastic pollution will enter its final round of negotiations in Busan, Republic of ...
The U.S. and 174 other nations failed to agree on a new treaty to reduce the plastic pollution contaminating our environment, food, water, and even our bodies.
The latest Global Plastic Treaty negotiations fell apart over a clash between two different perspectives on how best to handle this waste. The first perspective holds that plastics pollution is ...
The statement setting out the key elements the treaty must include to end plastic pollution by 2040 has been signed by companies including Nestle, Mars, Danone, SC Johnson, Tesco and Unilever.