Abstract

International policy discussions on plastic pollution are entering a new phase, with more than 100 governments calling for the launch of negotiations for a new global plastics agreement in 2022. This article aims to contribute to efforts to identify effective international policy levers to address plastic pollution. It takes stock of the evolution of views and perceptions on this complex and multi-faceted topic—from concerns about marine pollution and waste management towards new strategic directions that involve the entire plastics life-cycle and include climate and health impacts associated with the proliferation of plastics. It also traces the progressive development of responses—from voluntary approaches involving multiple stakeholders to national and international approaches focused on regulation. The paper is informed by desk research, a literature review and participation by the authors in informal and formal global governance processes on plastic pollution, the environment and development in the United Nations and World Trade Organization between 2019 and 2021. It also draws on empirical findings from a novel and original database on the life-cycle of plastic trade created by the authors. The paper argues that the important focus on downstream dimensions of plastic pollution—and strategies to address them—needs to be complemented by a broad life-cycle and “upstream” perspective that addresses plastic pollution at its source. It highlights the political economy tensions and inconsistencies at hand, observing that while some countries are taking concerted efforts to reduce pollution (including through bans on certain kinds of plastic and plastic products); to promote more circular plastic economies; and to reduce the carbon footprint of plastics (as part of a wider effort to decarbonize their economies), trade and investment in the plastic industry continues to rise. The paper argues that to reduce plastic pollution, emerging global governance efforts must integrate international environmental law and cooperation with a complementary and enabling global framework that addresses the economic, financial, industrial and trade policies needed to drive the necessary transformation of the plastics sector.

Highlights

  • Introduction and ApproachDespite growing alarm about plastic pollution, the production and use of plastics is forecast to continue to expand over coming decades

  • This paper takes up two inter-related questions: first, how are views about the scope and causes of plastic pollution evolving, and second, what are the implications for how governments and stakeholders address these through international policymaking?

  • While interest in the politics of plastics regulation and governance, there has been little systematic political or economic assessment of the range of global policy, regulation and governance options to tackle the upstream causes of expanding plastic production and pollution, as well as the wider development challenges associated with plastic pollution in developing countries and their efforts to reduce it

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Summary

Perspectives on the Drivers of Plastic Pollution

These three broad frames on the scope or nature of “plastics problem” are accompanied by different views on the main drivers or causes of plastic pollution. Teasing these out is important because it impacts on subsequent perspectives on the appropriate responses

A Global Waste Management Problem
A Product Design Problem
A Structural Problem
A Tradition of Voluntary Initiatives
A Growing Focus on Addressing Root Causes
An Emerging Focus on Development Issues
Evolution of the International Policy Landscape
Findings
International Environmental Cooperation
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