Ottawa to appeal court ruling that overturned order listing plastics as toxic substance

Source: https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/ottawa-appealing-court-decision-plastics-toxic-substance-1.7033929

Author: Darren Major

The federal government is planning to appeal a court decision that quashed an order-in-council listing manufactured plastic items as toxic. Last week, a Federal Court judge ruled that the government's move to list all plastic items as toxic was "unreasonable and unconstitutional." Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault and Justice Minister Arif Virani announced the government's intention to appeal in a joint statement on Monday.

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Petrochemical Interests Jeopardize Plastics Treaty Negotiations

Source: https://www.breakfreefromplastic.org/2023/11/20/post-inc-3-press-release/

Author: #BreakFreeFromPlastic

Nairobi, Kenya – The third meeting of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee (INC-3) for a global agreement to end plastic pollution concluded today at the UNEP headquarters in Nairobi. Despite a mandate for a revised draft, Member States failed to reach an agreement on priorities for intersessional work ahead of INC-4, despite an 11th-hour attempt, jeopardizing significant advancements for the treaty process.  With the petrochemical influence in the treaty negotiations, including the ‘low ambition’ of a group of ‘like-minded’ plastic-producing countries, and the lack of ambition by the so-called ‘high ambition’ countries, the INC-3 concluded without concrete headway towards the mandate adopted at the fifth United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA 5.2) to negotiate a comprehensive and legally binding treaty that will cover measures along the entire life cycle of plastic.

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U.N. plastic treaty talks grapple with re-use, recycle, reduce debate

Source: https://www.reuters.com/business/environment/un-plastic-treaty-talks-grapple-with-re-use-recycle-reduce-debate-2023-11-19/

Author: Duncan Miriri

NAIROBI, Nov 19 (Reuters) - A third round of United Nations negotiations to try to deliver the world's first treaty to control plastic pollution has drawn more than 500 proposals from governments, participants said on Sunday. Negotiators, who spent a week meeting in the Kenyan capital at talks known as INC3, have until the end of next year to strike a deal for the control of plastics, which produce an estimated 400 million tonnes of waste every year.

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Global talks to cut plastic waste stall as industry and environmental groups clash

Source: https://www.wpr.org/global-talks-cut-plastic-waste-stall-industry-and-environmental-groups-clash

Author: Michael Copley

Negotiations over a global plastics treaty ended in Kenya with little progress toward reining in plastic waste, as environmental groups criticized oil and gas producers for blocking a final decision on how to advance the deliberations. Members of the United Nations want to finalize a treaty by the end of 2024 to reduce the vast amount of plastic waste that piles up in landfills and the environment. Plastic production is expected to soar in the coming years, and almost every piece of it is made from chemicals derived from fossil fuels.

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Ambition Meets Inertia in Third Session of Global Plastic Treaty Talks Absent a Major Course Correction, Ottawa will host a “Polite but Massive Failure.”

Source: https://www.ciel.org/news/inc-3-reaction/

Author: CIEL

NAIROBI — A week of negotiations in Nairobi left all options on the table for a proposed Global Plastic Treaty but fell far short of the progress needed to deliver an ambitious treaty on an equally ambitious timeline. Governments that began the week with a “Zero Draft” of the treaty text and a clear mandate to agree on an active intersessional program of work are leaving eight days later with a “Revised Zero Draft” that has ballooned to 100 plus pages, with no intersessional agenda, and a clear warning that entertaining endless debate by those few who want to block progress at every turn is a recipe for inertia and eventual disaster. “This week made clear that an overwhelming majority of countries demand an ambitious treaty that covers the full lifecycle of plastics,” said CIEL President Carroll Muffett. “That treaty is still achievable in these talks, but only if negotiators acknowledge and confront the coordinated campaign by fossil fuel and petrochemical exporters to prevent real progress of any kind.”

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Chemical recycling is a fairytale

Source: https://www.dailyitem.com/opinion/chemical-recycling-is-a-fairytale/article_d2da255c-8538-11ee-b546-27da46cf2892.html

Author: Jess Conard

Magic wands only exist in the world of Harry Potter and other fictional works, but the plastics and petrochemical industries would like you to believe otherwise. They’re increasingly touting what they call “chemical recycling,” or “advanced recycling,” as a magical way to make hard-to-recycle plastic waste disappear. This October, a report released by the environmental groups Beyond Plastics and the International Pollutants Elimination Network unmasked the truth and investigated the chemical recycling facilities in the United States, two of which are in Ohio.

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UN INC3 ends in frustration as governments allow low ambition countries to derail Global Plastics Treaty

Source: https://www.greenpeace.org/international/press-release/63663/un-inc3-ends-in-frustration-as-governments-allow-low-ambition-countries-to-derail-global-plastics-treaty/

Author: Greenpeace International

Nairobi, Kenya – The third session of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee (INC3) for a Global Plastics Treaty ends on a disappointing note for the fight against the plastic and climate crises. Graham Forbes, Greenpeace Head of Delegation to the Global Plastics Treaty negotiations and Global Plastics Campaign Lead at Greenpeace USA, said: “Plastic directly harms each of the 8.1 billion people on this fragile planet, but our leaders have effectively chosen to treat petrochemical companies as the only stakeholders worth listening to.”

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Fossil Fuel Lobbyists Flock to Plastics Treaty Talks as Scientists, Environmentalists Seek Conflict of Interest Policies

Source: https://insideclimatenews.org/news/19112023/nairobi-plastics-treaty-talks-fossil-fuel-lobbyist-influence-conflicts-of-interest/

Author: James Bruggers

Fossil fuel and chemical company interests are out in force at the United Nations meeting in Nairobi, where delegates from about 170 countries are negotiating the potential terms of a global treaty to reduce plastic pollution. The Center for International Environmental Law, after combing over the official list of participants, has identified what it describes as 143 fossil fuel and chemical industry lobbyists registered to attend the meeting, presumably to influence the outcome. They come from some of the biggest names in the fossil fuel and chemical industries, including U.S.-based ExxonMobil and Dow Chemical, participating through trade or lobby organizations such as the American Fuel and Petrochemical Manufacturers or the Chemical and Allied Industries Association. 

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Important step towards ending waste colonialism: EU agrees to ban the export of its plastic waste to non-OECD countries

Source: https://rethinkplasticalliance.eu/news/important-step-towards-ending-waste-colonialism-eu-agrees-to-ban-the-export-of-its-plastic-waste-to-non-oecd-countries/

Author: Rethink Plastic

Early this morning, and after several months of negotiations, the European Commission, the European Parliament and the Council of the EU are understood to have reached an agreement to address the harmful practice of the EU’s plastic waste trade, in the context of the revision of the EU Waste Shipment Regulation. The Rethink Plastic alliance and Break Free From Plastic applaud the landmark decision to end plastic waste exports to non-OECD countries in two and a half years but regret that the EU institutions did not agree to stop exporting its plastic waste to all countries. The details, including whether safeguarding policies for intra-EU shipments have been adopted, are yet to be published.  

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EU agrees to ban plastic waste exports

Source: https://www.mrw.co.uk/news/eu-agrees-to-ban-plastic-waste-exports-17-11-2023/

Author: Daniel Bosley

The European Parliament and European Council have agreed to ban exports of plastic waste to non-OECD countries. The agreement yesterday to update the waste shipment regulations will mean waste can only be exported to these countries if certain environmental conditions are met. Virginijus Sinkevičius, European commissioner for environment, oceans and fisheries, said: “The agreement reached today by the two institutions shows our joint commitment to take responsibility of our waste challenges, rather than exporting our problems abroad.”

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New York lawsuit blames PepsiCo for plastic litter – not people

Source: https://www.cnn.com/2023/11/16/business/pepsi-pollution-lawsuit/index.html

Author: Danielle Wiener-Bronner, CNN

New York’s water and parks are full of plastic waste. But litterbugs aren’t the problem, according to New York Attorney General Letitia James. It’s the company that puts so many plastic bottles and packages into world, PepsiCo — the maker of Pepsi, Mountain Dew, Lay’s chips and dozens of other brands. Too often, conversations around environmental protection focus on the individual: What you, specifically, can do to reduce waste, improve recycling or otherwise save the environment. But James and others are making the case that the companies that rely on increasing sales of single-use plastics are the ones responsible, not individual shoppers.

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EU takes a step towards ending its harmful plastic waste exports – but still has some way to go

Source: https://eia-international.org/news/eu-takes-a-step-towards-ending-its-harmful-plastic-waste-exports-but-still-has-some-way-to-go/

Author: EIA

The three big institutions of the EU have today (17 November) agreed to a timetable to end polluting exports of plastic waste to some countries. Following several months of negotiations on the EU Waste Shipment Regulation, the European Commission, the European Parliament and the Council of the EU reached an agreement in the early hours of this morning. Their decision proposes to stop sending the bloc’s plastic waste to countries which are not members of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) in two-and-a-half years’ time.

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EU reaches deal to stop sending waste to countries that can't process it

Source: https://www.reuters.com/business/environment/eu-reaches-deal-stop-sending-waste-countries-that-cant-process-it-2023-11-17/

Author: Reuters

PARIS, Nov 17 (Reuters) - European Union lawmakers and member states have reached a deal to revise the bloc's waste shipment regulation and end exports of certain types of waste to third countries unable to process it properly, the EU Parliament said on Friday. "Exports of certain non-hazardous wastes and mixtures of non-hazardous wastes (...) will be allowed only to those non-OECD countries that consent and fulfil the criteria to treat such waste in an environmentally sound manner", the Parliament said.

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Federal court quashes cabinet order underlying single-use plastics ban

Source: https://www.ctvnews.ca/politics/federal-court-quashes-cabinet-order-underlying-single-use-plastics-ban-1.6648375

Author: The Canadian Press

OTTAWA - The Federal Court has quashed a cabinet order that listed plastic manufactured items as toxic under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act. The court says in a decision released today that it was not reasonable to say all plastic manufactured items are harmful because the category is too broad. The decision has implications for the government's ban of six single-use plastic items, including straws, grocery bags and takeout containers.

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“Plastic will overwhelm us:” Scientists say health should be the core of global plastic treaty

Source: https://www.ehn.org/global-plastic-pollution-treaty-2666263895.html

Author: Brian Bienkowski

More than 20 international scientists put forth a plan today to encourage world leaders to put human health at the center of global plastic treaty negotiations taking place this week in Nairobi, Kenya. The plan, dubbed the Health Scientists' Global Plastic Treaty by its proponents, comes as negotiators from about 175 countries — along with industry representatives, environmentalists and others — meet through Nov. 19 to advance a treaty to end global plastic pollution. The Nairobi gathering is the third of five such meetings. The plan is to complete negotiations by the end of 2024 and have the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP) develop the first international treaty tackling plastic on land and in bodies of water.

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