Plastic pollution floods our planet, destroys biodiversity, and worsens the climate crisis across the entire life of plastic – from extraction, production, packaging, distribution, incineration and dumping. This deadly cycle brought by runaway plastic production and use needs to stop for good.
Plastic production keeps us dependent on fossil fuels and not only drives climate change, but also biodiversity loss and harms communities and workers living near production sites and landfills. If the industry has its way, plastic production could double within the next 10-15* years, and triple by 2050. The treaty must cut plastic production by at least 75% by 2040 based on a 2019 baseline followed by a phasedown in the production and use of plastic and deliver a just transition away from all virgin production capacity.
All plastics are problematic when considered from a whole life cycle approach — the environmental, health and social impacts from extraction (e.g fossil sources), plastic production, use, waste management and disposal make a strong case that plastic must be reduced as far as possible, particularly where safer, more sustainable, and circular substitutes exist. Due to the large-scale use of plastic in todayʼs society, it is imperative that we eliminate the most problematic plastic products first.
The treaty must drive a just transition to sustainable livelihoods across the plastics supply chain, empower workers, prioritizing waste pickers and other affected communities. It must support reuse and refill business models; prioritize the interests of Indigenous Peoples and advance traditional knowledge.
From production to disposal, plastic pollution negatively impacts our health and human rights. It accelerates social injustice and environmental degradation, and aggravates inequalities brought about by the climate crisis. The negotiations must ensure fair and equitable representation throughout the negotiation and implementation process from Indigenous Peoples and communities disproportionately affected by the plastic pollution crisis. The treaty must have a strong foundation in justice and human rights in order to mitigate further harm.
Champions of Change has been initiated by Greenpeace International, the Break Free from Plastic movement and Plastic Pollution Coalition.