Environmentalists decry oil lobby presence at plastic treaty talks

Members of Greenpeace during the talks in Ottawa on a global treaty to reduce plastic pollution, on April 23. PHOTO: AFP

OTTAWA - Environmental activists denounced on April 25 the increased presence of oil industry lobbyists at talks in Ottawa on a global treaty to reduce plastic pollution.

The 196 fossil fuel and chemical industry lobbyists outnumber any single delegation in Ottawa for the fourth round of negotiations. These talks have nearly 40 per cent more industry lobbyists than the last round in Kenya in November, according to the Centre for International Environmental Law (Ciel).

The meeting in Ottawa is considered crucial, as it is the penultimate session before a final round of negotiations in South Korea later in 2024.

Negotiators from 175 countries are meeting to nail down a world-first UN treaty to address the scourge of plastics found everywhere from mountaintops to ocean depths, and in human blood and breast milk.

“The footprint of industry lobbyists is progressively increasing as calls for the treaty to address plastic production grow both inside and outside the negotiations,” noted Ciel.

They are more numerous than the 180 representatives of the European Union delegations, for example, and three times more than the 58 researchers from the Scientists’ Coalition for an Effective Plastics Treaty, said the non-governmental organisation.

“The presence of actors in the room who are responsible for generating this crisis creates power imbalances that obstruct progress,” said Ciel’s Rachel Radvany.

“The influence and growing presence of fossil fuel and petrochemical industries are not what the people want nor what the climate needs,” said Mr Graham Forbes of Greenpeace.

Companies are not allowed to register for the talks, but lobbyists can join professional associations or national delegations in order to participate.

Plastics producers are pushing for more recycling while environmentalists want cuts to the volume of plastic produced, as annual production has more than doubled in 20 years to 460 million tonnes, and is on track to triple within four decades.

Industry lobbyists “are enjoying seats on state delegations while the communities most impacted by the plastic crisis struggle to have their voices heard”, said Ms Tori Cress, who is representing indigenous peoples at the negotiations.

The Ottawa talks are scheduled to continue until April 29. AFP

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