Biden Administraton Dumps Planned Support For Limits On Plastic Production, Jolting Treaty Talks
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The situation speaks to a central conflict that has emerged from talks over the treaty, which the U.N. agreed to negotiate two years ago to end plastic pollution. Delegates havent agreed on whether the pact should focus on managing plastic waste through things like ocean cleanups and higher recycling rates or on tamping down the growing rate of plastic production.
Nearly 70 countries, along with scientists and environmental groups, support the latter. They say its futile to mop up plastic litter while more and more of it keeps getting made. But a vocal contingent of oil-exporting countries has pushed for a lower-ambition treaty, using a consensus-based voting norm to slow-walk the negotiations. Besides leaving out production limits, those countries also want the treaty to allow for voluntary national targets, rather than binding global rules.
Exactly which policies the U.S. will now support isnt entirely clear. While the White House spokesperson told Grist that it wants to ensure the treaty addresses
the supply of primary plastic polymers, this could mean a whole host of things, including a tax on plastic production or bans on individual plastic products. These kinds of so-called market instruments could drive down demand for more plastic, but with far less certainty than a quantitative production limit. Bjorn Beeler, executive director of the nonprofit International Pollutants Elimination Network, noted that the U.S. could technically address the supply of plastics by reducing the industrys projected growth rates which would still allow the amount of manufactured plastic to continue increasing every year.
What the U.S. has said is extremely vague, he said. They have not been a leading actor to move the treaty into something meaningful.
To the extent that the White Houses latest announcement was a clarification and not an outright reversal as staffers reportedly insisted was the case Banner said the Biden administration should have made their position clearer months ago, right after the August meeting. In August, we were definitely saying capping, and it was never corrected, she said. If there was a misunderstanding, then it should have been corrected a long time ago.
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https://grist.org/regulation/us-backtracks-production-caps-global-plastics-treaty-united-nations/