Zürcher Nachrichten - Nations warn of deadlock at landmark plastic pollution talks

EUR -
AED 3.885787
AFN 71.80765
ALL 98.239422
AMD 418.169843
ANG 1.903008
AOA 965.882003
ARS 1068.650177
AUD 1.623076
AWG 1.906902
AZN 1.802665
BAM 1.955191
BBD 2.132036
BDT 126.180726
BGN 1.955191
BHD 0.398076
BIF 3119.629
BMD 1.057921
BND 1.41456
BOB 7.296729
BRL 6.320389
BSD 1.055971
BTN 89.3152
BWP 14.366528
BYN 3.455624
BYR 20735.246053
BZD 2.128438
CAD 1.482729
CDF 3037.290761
CHF 0.932213
CLF 0.037338
CLP 1030.609218
CNY 7.661149
CNH 7.668074
COP 4628.659307
CRC 536.63297
CUC 1.057921
CUP 28.034899
CVE 110.23069
CZK 25.265373
DJF 188.031474
DKK 7.459932
DOP 63.760154
DZD 141.035102
EGP 52.443677
ERN 15.868811
ETB 133.45956
FJD 2.395186
FKP 0.835035
GBP 0.830611
GEL 2.978089
GGP 0.835035
GHS 16.208955
GIP 0.835035
GMD 75.112747
GNF 9101.167217
GTQ 8.147464
GYD 220.921237
HKD 8.232781
HNL 26.715685
HRK 7.546422
HTG 138.40692
HUF 412.885707
IDR 16753.232474
ILS 3.841702
IMP 0.835035
INR 89.462541
IQD 1383.269451
IRR 44525.242213
ISK 145.337556
JEP 0.835035
JMD 166.368217
JOD 0.750176
JPY 158.445193
KES 137.007356
KGS 91.831537
KHR 4255.6754
KMF 493.996485
KPW 952.128244
KRW 1476.344271
KWD 0.325226
KYD 0.879926
KZT 545.600179
LAK 23174.786734
LBP 94558.868087
LKR 306.904474
LRD 189.541004
LSL 19.043073
LTL 3.123765
LVL 0.639926
LYD 5.167392
MAD 10.564112
MDL 19.323985
MGA 4953.458212
MKD 61.510854
MMK 3436.085222
MNT 3594.814539
MOP 8.465865
MRU 42.12089
MUR 49.140818
MVR 16.355854
MWK 1831.030083
MXN 21.561218
MYR 4.702499
MZN 67.612112
NAD 19.043073
NGN 1781.48599
NIO 38.857905
NOK 11.685902
NPR 142.90452
NZD 1.785942
OMR 0.407163
PAB 1.055971
PEN 3.954969
PGK 4.259674
PHP 61.995745
PKR 293.602415
PLN 4.300227
PYG 8246.433257
QAR 3.849002
RON 4.976781
RSD 116.919608
RUB 112.628944
RWF 1456.046798
SAR 3.974566
SBD 8.861706
SCR 15.096922
SDG 636.3432
SEK 11.531415
SGD 1.417089
SHP 0.835035
SLE 24.068089
SLL 22184.073485
SOS 603.512154
SRD 37.454265
STD 21896.822908
SVC 9.239124
SYP 2658.057389
SZL 19.05207
THB 36.280373
TJS 11.509718
TMT 3.702723
TND 3.320267
TOP 2.47776
TRY 36.702576
TTD 7.154773
TWD 34.333799
TZS 2787.632336
UAH 43.92013
UGX 3896.787106
USD 1.057921
UYU 45.23592
UZS 13570.776029
VES 50.302077
VND 26814.587453
VUV 125.598473
WST 2.953282
XAF 655.752894
XAG 0.034552
XAU 0.000399
XCD 2.859084
XDR 0.807749
XOF 655.752894
XPF 119.331742
YER 264.907146
ZAR 19.108006
ZMK 9522.559752
ZMW 28.431151
ZWL 340.650039
  • RBGPF

    62.0000

    62

    +100%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    24.54

    +0.08%

  • NGG

    0.3500

    63.68

    +0.55%

  • BCC

    1.2000

    147.6

    +0.81%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    24.32

    -0.16%

  • SCS

    0.0000

    13.47

    0%

  • VOD

    0.0000

    8.97

    0%

  • RIO

    0.5200

    62.84

    +0.83%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    47.08

    +0.06%

  • JRI

    0.2000

    13.61

    +1.47%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0300

    7.1

    -0.42%

  • GSK

    -0.2000

    34.13

    -0.59%

  • AZN

    0.4200

    67.62

    +0.62%

  • BCE

    0.0100

    27.03

    +0.04%

  • BTI

    0.0000

    37.94

    0%

  • BP

    0.1800

    29.31

    +0.61%

Nations warn of deadlock at landmark plastic pollution talks
Nations warn of deadlock at landmark plastic pollution talks / Photo: Roland de Courson - AFP

Nations warn of deadlock at landmark plastic pollution talks

Diplomats warned Saturday that a majority of countries could walk away from talks on the world's first plastic pollution agreement if a handful of delegations continue resisting calls to compromise.

Text size:

Nearly 200 countries are in South Korea's Busan for negotiations on a deal to curb plastic pollution.

But efforts to reach the landmark agreement are locked over several key sticking points, particularly reducing production and phasing out chemicals believed or known to harm human health.

Over 100 countries back those measures, and insist a treaty without them will fail to solve the pollution crisis.

But around a dozen nations -- mostly producers of plastic precursors derived from fossil fuels -- are strongly opposed.

As a result, just a day before talks are supposed to end, the draft text remains full of opposing views and contradictory language.

And frustration is growing.

"The overwhelming majority of delegates here demand an ambitious treaty," said Panama's delegation head Juan Carlos Monterrey Gomez.

"If the reduction of production is not there, there is no treaty."

"We cannot let a few loud voices derail the process," he added.

- 'Ready to walk away' -

A diplomat from the High Ambition Coalition, which groups dozens of countries seeking a strong deal, echoed that sentiment.

"We are a large group uniting around key effective elements, and getting ready to walk away," he told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss closed-door deliberations.

He warned that "some countries" were actively considering calling a vote, which would circumvent the UN's traditional approach of agreement by consensus and could "raise a lot of eyebrows."

It was a possibility being increasingly discussed as a "last resort," said the Democratic Republic of Congo's J.M. Bope Bope Lapwong.

"I think that if we can't reach an agreement, we'll be obliged to go to a vote. We cannot come all this way, all these kilometres, to fail," he told AFP.

"True, it's not the usual way at UN meetings, and we will do it to our shame -- because when you negotiate, you don't expect to win it all."

More than 90 percent of plastic is not recycled, while plastic production is expected to triple by 2060.

Environmental groups have pushed ambitious countries to move to a vote if progress stalls, arguing that countries like Saudi Arabia and Russia have not offered any compromises during talks.

Neither delegation responded to repeated requests by AFP for comment.

"A handful of governments... are looking backwards and refusing to take the steps necessary for us all to advance," said Greenpeace's Graham Forbes.

"I think we are at a very risky moment right now of being sold out, and that would be an absolute catastrophe."

But observers warned that calling a vote would be a risky strategy that could alienate even some countries in favour of a strong treaty.

Another option would be for the diplomat chairing the talks to simply gavel through an agreement over the objections of a handful of holdouts, they said.

But that too holds risks, potentially embittering the remaining diplomatic process and jeopardising adoption of a treaty down the road.

"We don't want to move outside the framework of the United Nations," said an official from the French environment ministry.

"We hope we will find agreement between now and tomorrow and that's the option that we're focused on," he added.

"A lot can happen in 24 hours."

E.Leuenberger--NZN