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Plastic Pact Stalls in Geneva

Plastic Pact Stalls in Geneva

After nine long days in Geneva, global envoys ended negotiations on a United Nations treaty to curb plastic pollution without a deal, as reported by The Guardian. The failure frustrated many delegates, but negotiators insisted the effort isn’t over.

“We are truly sad to say that we will not have a treaty to end plastic pollution here in Geneva,” said Andreas Bjelland Erikse, Norway’s head negotiator.

The talks exposed a clear split. More than 100 nations pushed for strict limits on plastic production and rules covering the full life cycle of plastics, from design to disposal. Oil-producing economies—including the U.S. and Saudi Arabia—blocked those demands, per the Associated Press. They argued caps would harm jobs and growth, preferring to focus on recycling, waste management, and product redesign. Delegates drafted two versions of a treaty, but neither gained enough support. Ecuador’s ambassador, who chaired the session, ended the meeting without setting a new date.

The stakes are high. The world produces more than 400 million tons of new plastic every year. The OECD warns that figure could jump 70 percent by 2040 if governments fail to act. Scientists have found microplastics in human organs and bloodstreams, linking them to fertility, neurological, and immune problems. Recycling offers little relief: only six percent of plastic packaging ever gets reused.

Even so, some signs point forward. UN Environment Programme chief Inger Andersen called the week a stepping stone rather than a dead end. China, once reluctant to back broad regulation, showed new openness to rules covering plastics across their life cycle. That shift could reshape future talks. Countries like Colombia and Tuvalu pressed their case with urgency, warning of disproportionate threats to vulnerable ecosystems and communities.

Momentum outside the talks is building, too. Youth activists keep plastic pollution in the public eye through protests and cleanups. Startups are racing to create alternatives—compostable packaging, edible materials, new forms of bioplastics. Investors, after a slowdown, are beginning to return to green innovation. All of this pushes governments and companies to look beyond recycling and confront the source: overproduction.

Geneva didn’t deliver a treaty, but it did set the stage. The negotiations showed where the pressure points lie and which players are shifting. Recycling alone won’t solve the crisis. Progress now depends on deeper cuts in plastic production, tougher regulation, and new forms of global cooperation. Whether through another round of talks, regional pacts, or coalitions of willing nations, the fight against plastic pollution will keep moving.

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