
There are billions upon billions of items of plastic waste choking our oceans, lakes, and rivers and piling up on land is more than unsightly and harmful to plants and wildlife. Plastic pollution is very real and single-use plastics are small but have a large impact. Here is a fact sheet from Earth Day: https://www.earthday.org/2018/03/29/fact-sheet-single-use-plastics/
“The Future Depends on What You Do Today”
Mahatma Gandhi
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Tote Bag from India, Say no to Single Use -
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Super proud of India’s support for the United Nations Initiative to reduce pollution! ????☮︎ They handed out the tote bag shown above to all staff today. Which is think is very cool!
I’m not sure if everyone is fully aware of the initiative to ban single use plastics, so lets have Dia Mirza (a Bollywood actress) explains how we can do our part:
Why not join them and also reduce our own pollution and use the reusable alternatives =)
The UN Resolution: Addressing single-use plastic products pollution*
The United Nations Environment Assembly,
Concerned that waste, in particular plastic waste, is not managed effectively in all member states,
Conscious that only nine per cent of the nine billion tonnes of plastics ever produced have been recycled and that most of it ends in landfills, dumps and the environment,
Aware that if the current consumption patterns and waste management practices do not change, by 2050 there will be around 12 billion metric tonnes of plastic litter in landfills and the environment,
Mindful that while plastic plays an important role in the economy, plastic packaging accounts for about half of the plastic waste in the world, and that its mismanagement leads to a loss of resources and value as well as affects the environment,
Alarmed by the serious environmental, social, and economic impacts of plastic waste/ pollution including blocking waterways and clogging sewers and providing breeding grounds for mosquitoes and pests, and blocking animal airways and stomachs among others, as well as the health impacts of poor solid waste management practices,
Recalling the Ministerial declaration of the United Nations Environment Assembly at its third session entitled “Towards a pollution-free planet”,
Welcoming global efforts to raise awareness about the negative impacts of plastic pollution and
in that regard appreciating the 2018 World Environment Day held under the theme “beating plastic
pollution” with India as its global host,
Noting with appreciation the actions taken by Member States and regional integration
organizations that have adopted policies and legislation to reduce and in some instances phase out
certain single-use plastic products,
Noting the important role of key sectors such as plastics producers, retailers and the consumer
goods industry, as well as importers, packaging firms, transport firms, and recyclers to contribute to
the reduction of plastic waste, arising from their products and activities, as well as to provide
information on the impacts arising from their products and encourages innovative approaches such as
the use of extended producer responsibility schemes, deposit refund schemes and other initiatives,
- Encourages Member States to develop and implement national or regional actions, as
appropriate, to address the environmental impacts of single-use plastic products; - Also encourages member states to take actions, as appropriate, to promote the
identification and development of environmentally friendly alternatives to single-use plastic products,
taking into account the full life cycle implications of those alternatives; - Invites member states to promote improved waste management that will contribute to
reducing the discharge of plastics waste into the environment; - Also invites Member States to work together with industry to encourage the private
sector to innovate and find affordable and environmentally friendly alternatives to single-use plastic
products and to promote business models that take into account the full environmental impact of their
products; - Encourages Governments and the private sector to promote the more resource-efficient
design, production, use and sound management of plastics across their life cycle; and encourages in
particular member states to carry out environmental education actions about the impact of plastic
pollution, promote sustainable consumption patterns, and on sustainable alternatives to single-use
plastic products; - Encourages member states to take comprehensive action, in regard to single-use
plastic products, to address the waste through, where appropriate, legislation, implementation of
international agreements, provision of adequate waste management infrastructure, improvement of
waste management practices and support for waste minimization, and environmentally sound clean-up
activities, as well as information sharing and supporting innovation; - Invites Member States, intergovernmental organizations, the scientific community,
non-governmental organizations, the private sector and other stakeholders to promote and enhance
cooperation in scientific research and the development of environmentally sound alternatives to the
single-use plastic products where appropriate, as well as to tackle plastic pollution within local,
national and regional voluntary and regulatory frameworks, as appropriate; - Requests the Executive Director of the United Nations Environment Programme, in
partnership with other UN agencies, funds and programmes, to:
(a) Support Member States, upon their request, in the development and implementation of
national or regional action plans to address the environmental impacts of single-use plastic products;
(b) Facilitate and/or coordinate technical and policy support to governments, especially of
developing countries that so request, the scientific community, non-governmental organizations, the
private sector and other stakeholders, regarding the environmental impact of single-use plastic
products and the promotion of innovative and environmentally friendly solutions for their replacement,
taking into account their full environmental impact;
(c) Make available existing information on actions member states have taken to address
plastic pollution and the full life cycle environmental impacts of plastics to the full life cycle
environmental impacts of other alternative materials and share this information in advance of
UNEA 5.
You can read the PDF here:
https://papersmart.unon.org/resolution/uploads/k1900861.pdf#overlay-context=node/271
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