A plastics treaty is on the cards – and it could join the rescue of the ozone layer as a landmark success in environmental diplomacy
Plastic production has soared some 30-fold since it came into widespread use in the 1960s. We now churn out about 430m tonnes a year, easily outweighing the combined mass of all 8 billion people alive. Left unabated, it continues to accelerate: plastic consumption is due to nearly double by 2050.
Now there is a chance that this huge growth will stop, even go into reverse. This month in Paris, the world’s governments agreed to draft a new treaty to control plastics. The UN says it could cut production by a massive 80% by 2040.
Geoffrey Lean is a specialist environment correspondent and author
More Stories
Aidan Jones: the 10 funniest things I have ever seen (on the internet)
Sun’s south pole revealed for first time, in images from Solar Orbiter spacecraft
How to save the Amazon part two: the magic and mystery – podcast