Despite severe headwinds: A meaningful Plastics Treaty should aim to reduce plastics production and achieve circularity
Systemic failures are driving rapid growth in production, consumption and leakage of plastics in the marine, terrestrial and freshwater environments, shows a new EASAC Commentary. The summary of the latest scientific evidence aims to inform negotiations of a much-needed International Plastics Treaty. With current policies, global plastic waste is expected to nearly triple by 2060. "Negotiators must tackle the conflicts in the whole system," says EASAC's Prof. Michael Norton. "It will hurt commercial interests and thus not be a piece of cake. But to slow and reverse damage to the environment,