Cook Islands calls for bold efforts to “halt plastic pollution as a significant planetary crisis that impacts our ecosystems, biodiversity, the climate and human health.”
“Saying No to single-use plastics” is not enough, much more must be done by our global community to address the plastic crisis we now face.
Recognising this, the UN Environment Assembly passed a resolution in February 2022 to develop a legally binding instrument to end plastic pollution including that within our marine environment. This must be completed by the end of 2024 across five official International Negotiating Committee’s (INCs).
Since the 1950’s the world has generated nine billion tonnes of plastic, for which only nine percent has been recycled. Over eight million tonnes of plastic enter the ocean each year with 40 percent of the ocean’s surface covered in plastic debris. If our plastic consumption and behaviour continues, scientists warn that there will be more plastic than fish in the ocean by 2050.
Living within the largest of the world’s oceans, the Pacific Islands are uniting to build One Pacific Voice to amplify our Island regional concerns and ensure they are reflected in this global agreement in the Cook Islands.
The Pacific Regional Preparatory Workshop was convened by the Secretariat of the Pacific Environment Programme (SPREP) with funding support from the Government of Australia and the Capacity Building Related to Multilateral Environmental Agreements (MEAs) in African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) Countries – Phase III.
The Cook Islands fully supports a legally binding instrument to end plastic pollution that protects the environment and human health from the impacts of plastic across its full life cycle, and to attain a safe circular economy for plastics.
“We have joined the High Ambition Coalition to end plastic pollution. This coalition sets an ambitious target to reverse and end plastic pollution by 2040,” said Halatoa Fua, Director of the Cook Islands National Environment Service.
“We must be bold in our efforts to challenge the status quo and halt plastic pollution as a significant planetary crisis that impacts our ecosystems, biodiversity, the climate and human health.”
The first INC was held in Uruguay in November 2022, with the second (INC2) to take place in Paris France in May. Over the next two-days in the Cook Islands, the Pacific Islands are meeting to form their strategy for a united way forward.
“The road to INC2 and beyond is an easy one if we stand together as a strong region, with our voices as loud as our oceans,” said Fua.
“We call for a treaty that is firmly rooted in a human rights-based approach and our research is supported by science, and one that honours the waste hierarchy and precautionary principles.”
Since 2012, the Cook Islands has had a Single Use Plastics regulation in place to guide their fight against plastic pollution, coupled with promotion of the Reuse, Reduce and Recycle values. As the world moves towards a new global treaty the Cook Islands is accelerating efforts to combat plastic pollution in all phases of production, use and legacy.
The Cook Islands aims to pass a new Solid and Hazardous Waste Bill this year which will include a new schedule of banned plastic items including plastic straws, polystyrene containers, single serve butter and spreads as well as products containing microbeads. This new bill will also introduce an advanced disposable recovery fee.
The island nation has also applied for its funding under the Eight Round of Funding under the Global Environment Facility System for Transparent Allocation of Resources (GEF8 STAR) to focus on Circular Solutions to Plastic Pollution Integration Programme. This has been recommended to the GEF Council for review and approval.
“We will receive USD3 Million and are the only Pacific Island and one of two Small Islands Developing States Countries recommended,” said Fua.
“This programme will demonstrate and scale upstream and midstream, with an enabling environment to eliminate single use plastic products and packaging, enable circular design of materials and products, and ensure circulation of materials and products in practice through reuse and refill systems,” said Fua.
This story was originally published at SPREP on 25 April 2023, reposted via PACNEWS.