Kenya wants to end all plastic pollution. Will global leaders buy in?

A treaty to end plastic pollution worldwide is being negotiated in Nairobi. While Kenya is a global leader in addressing plastic pollution, other nations with large petrochemical industries want to focus on waste control instead, alarming environmentalists.

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Rajanish Kakade/AP
On World Environment Day, a boy walks on plastic waste at the Badhwar Park beach on the Arabian Sea coast in Mumbai, India, June 5, 2023. The first international, legally binding treaty on plastic pollution on land and at sea is being negotiated in Nairobi, Kenya.

Efforts to create a landmark treaty to end global plastic pollution advanced on Nov. 13 in Kenya’s capital as nations, plus petrochemical companies, environmentalists, and others affected by the pollution gathered to discuss draft language for the first time.

The gathering in Nairobi is the third in a compressed five-meeting schedule intended to complete negotiations by the end of next year.

“The urgency of addressing plastic pollution cannot be overstated,” said Gustavo Adolfo Meza-Cuadra Velasquez, chair of the negotiating committee, at the headquarters of the United Nations Environment Program in Nairobi. “To bring a difference at the scale required, we must work collectively.”

Kenya’s President William Ruto called the treaty “the first domino” in a shift away from plastic pollution.

But negotiations have been strained by concerns over delays in discussing the plastics issue at hand. In the last round of talks in Paris, talks stalled for about two days as some countries hampered discussions.

The power dynamics and positions of different delegations became clear in the first two rounds of talks in Paris and Punta del Este, Uruguay. They echo some of the same positions as in international climate talks, and with good reason – many of the players are the same. Plastic is largely made from crude oil and natural gas, giving oil-producing countries and companies a large stake in any treaty.

Global negotiators last met in Paris in June and agreed to produce the initial treaty text before reconvening in Nairobi. The draft was published in early September. The U.N. Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee on Plastic Pollution is charged with developing the first international, legally binding treaty on plastic pollution on land and at sea.

Kenya is a global leader in fighting plastic pollution, and in 2017, the country banned the manufacture, sale, and use of single-use plastic bags. In what is one of the strictest bans on the products, lawbreakers face fines and up to four years in jail.

Two years later, Kenya banned single-use plastic like cutlery, straws, and PET bottles from parks, forests, beaches, and other protected areas. Kenya is also an important player in environmental matters as home to UNEP’s headquarters. The country generates more than 70% of its electricity from renewable sources.

Norway and Rwanda are leading a “high ambition coalition” of governments that want to end plastic pollution by 2040 by cutting production and limiting some chemicals used in making plastics.

The two countries issued a ministerial joint statement this month calling for an ambitious and effective treaty to protect human health and the environment from plastic pollution by addressing the full life cycle of plastics. They expressed “deep concern” about significant increases in plastic production, plastic litter, and greenhouse gas emissions. Plastic production is forecast to triple by 2060, according to UNEP.

Saudi Arabia, on the other hand, is leading a group of countries that have large petroleum industries and prefer to focus on recycling and waste management.

On Nov. 11, Iran announced a coalition with Saudi Arabia, China, Russia, and other countries with large petrochemical industries to advocate for the treaty to focus on waste control, rather than the entire life cycle of plastics as agreed last year, raising concerns from environmentalists.

“It is unfortunate that a handful of governments are putting the short-term interests of petrochemical companies ahead of the health of the planet and their own citizens,” Graham Forbes, global campaign lead for Greenpeace, said. “World leaders have committed to develop a binding treaty that addresses the full life-cycle of plastics, and we expect them to honor that.”

Eirik Lindebjerg, global plastics policy lead at the World Wildlife Fund, said those countries are trying “to make this more of a kind of loose voluntary agreement rather than the strong treaty that the clear majority of countries here are pushing for.”

The United States’ delegation suggests the treaty include some meaningful universal obligations the high-ambition coalition wants, while also recognizing some national discretion, both because of the differences between countries and because some won’t agree to it otherwise.

The draft represents the range of viewpoints shared at the first two meetings. Björn Beeler, international coordinator for the International Pollutants Elimination Network, compared it to a large menu people haven’t ordered from yet. Nonetheless, he said, it is evident that negotiations have moved beyond plastic waste and into addressing plastic production and toxic chemicals used to make plastic.

Mr. Beeler expects the draft to grow more before it shrinks and becomes final, as delegates add in ideas in Nairobi and countries develop their positions. IPEN wants a treaty that addresses the environmental and health issues posed by chemicals in plastics as the products are used, recycled, discarded, or burned as waste.

Leaders of the global plastics industry are advocating for a process called chemical or advanced recycling and said they were very disappointed the draft doesn’t have a strong focus on that. They view this as essential to solving the plastic waste crisis.

Environmental groups call it a marketing tactic to distract from real solutions like producing and using less plastic. Beyond Plastics and IPEN issued a report in October that says the process threatens the environment, the climate, human health, and environmental justice.

Chemical recycling typically uses heat or chemical solvents to break down plastics into liquid and gas to produce an oil-like mixture or basic chemicals. Industry leaders say that mixture can be made back into plastic pellets to make new products.

Chris Jahn, a spokesperson for the International Council of Chemical Associations, said the draft was a missed opportunity to focus on circularity, rather than on caps and bans that don’t address the issue of plastic becoming litter and pollution. He said they’re working to get chemical recycling added.

“The focus is on ending plastic pollution, not plastic production,” he said.

Karen McKee, president of ExxonMobil Product Solutions Company and also an ICCA leader, said they want to address the valid concern about plastic pollution, while also ensuring that society, including the developing world, benefits from plastic. Like Mr. Jahn, she said the treaty should focus on increasing circularity and redirecting plastic waste to recycling.

ExxonMobil does chemical recycling at its massive complex in Baytown, Texas, and plans to add the capability to many of its other manufacturing sites globally. Baytown includes plastic manufacturing, oil refining, and lubricant and chemical production.

The negotiations, which have attracted more than 2,000 participants, will end on Nov. 19.

This story was reported by The Associated Press. Jennifer McDermott reported from Providence, Rhode Island.

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