Plastic Recycling

UK joins G7 in ocean plastics plan

Plastic bottles and rubbish pollution in ocean

The UK, sitting among five other industrial powers, has signed up to a new charter that will help to protect the oceans from pollution.

Although the United States and Japan both refused to join, five countries at the G7 summit committed to work with their industries so that 100% reusable, recyclable or recoverable plastics are used by 2030.

A communique said: “We recognise the urgency of the threat of ocean plastic waste and marine litter to ecosystems and the lost value of plastics in the waste stream.

It continued, saying that: “We commit to building on previous G7 commitments and taking a lifecycle approach to plastics stewardship on land and at sea, moving towards a more resource efficient and sustainable management of plastics.”

Alongside the UK, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, and the European Union committed and pledged to recycle and reuse at least 55% of plastic packaging by 2030 and recover no less than 100% of plastics by 2030.

Jennifer Morgan, Greenpeace International executive director, said: “While the leadership to outline a common blueprint is good news, voluntary charters focused on recycling and repurposing will not solve the problem at the source.

“It’s time for the world’s largest economies to recognise that we cannot simply recycle our way out of this problem while we keep churning out so much throwaway plastic in the first place.

“Governments must move beyond voluntary agreements to legislate binding reduction targets and bans on single-use plastics, invest in new and reuse delivery models for products, and hold corporations accountable for the problem they have created.”

Andy has worked as a freelance journalist for a number of years and has been published in some of the UK’s top newspapers. He is now the editor Commercial Waste Magazine and contributes to a large selection of headlines and blog articles on the site.

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