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Competing axes of power in the global plastics treaty: Understanding the politics of progress and setbacks in negotiating a high-ambition agreement

Organoids 2025 15 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Peter Dauvergne, Jen Iris Allan, Simon Beaudoin, Bethanie Carney Almroth, Jennifer Clapp, Emily Cowan, Babet de Groot, Trisia Farrelly, Natalia de Miranda Grilli, Alice Mah, Elizabeth Mendenhall, Rosetta Paik, Rob Ralston, Peter Stoett, Aleke Stöfen-O’Brien, Jack Taggart, Rachel Tiller, Patricia Villarrubia-Gómez, Joanna Vince

Summary

This analysis examined the December 2024 UN plastics treaty negotiations in Busan, South Korea, where a majority of states supported high-ambition legally binding measures on hazardous plastics and chemical regulation, but petrostates and industry interests stalled progress. The paper identifies intersecting axes of pro-plastics power and argues that strengthening the high-ambition coalition and enhancing transparency are critical to achieving a robust global plastics treaty.

Headlines in December 2024 proclaimed the “collapse” and “failure” of United Nations plastics treaty negotiations in Busan, South Korea. This is, however, an overly simplistic and pessimistic portrayal. Progress on less contentious issues was made, and the meeting was adjourned with a commitment to continue negotiating in 2025 on the basis of the “Chair’s text.” Significantly, at the closing plenary, a majority of states voiced support for a “high-ambition” treaty covering the full life cycle of plastics, drawing clear red lines on the necessity of legally binding measures to phase out hazardous plastics, regulate chemicals in plastics, and finance just transitions. Delegates from developing countries such as Rwanda, Panama, and Mexico were especially steadfast in demanding an “ambitious” treaty to end plastic pollution, including in marine ecosystems. Yet there were also setbacks, as multiple, intersecting axes of pro-plastics power – comprising loose alliances of petrostates and business interests profiting from rising plastics production – sought to thwart high-ambition obligations. Industry actors lobbied against stringent commitments and endeavored to narrow the treaty’s scope to downstream waste management. Petrostates such as Russia and Saudi Arabia, meanwhile, stalled discussions and bracketed high-ambition text. Divisions between developing and developed countries also emerged over the appropriate financing mechanism. Despite this turbulence, achieving a strong treaty remains possible. But this will require strengthening the high-ambition axis of power, enhancing transparency and accountability, and ensuring the meaningful inclusion of rights holders, local communities, and civil society.

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