GENEVA / PLASTIC POLLUTION PRESSER
STORY: GENEVA / PLASTIC POLLUTION PRESSER
TRT: 03:10
SOURCE: UNTV CH
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS
DATELINE: 05 AUGUST 2025 GENEVA, SWITZERLAND
1. Wide shot, Palais des Nations, flag alley
2. Wide, Press room podium and journalists, TV screens.
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Inger Andersen, Executive Director, United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP):
“We can't forget that the world wants and indeed needs a plastic conventional treaty because the crisis is getting out of hand and people are frankly outraged; people who are living with that pollution. We know that plastic is in our nature, in our oceans, and yes, even in our bodies.”
4. Wide shot, podium speakers
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Katrin Schneeberger, Director of the Federal Office for the Environment (FOEN), Switzerland:
“Today, we stand at a critical crossroads. Plastic waste is choking our lakes, harming wildlife and threatening human health. This is more than just an environmental issue, it is a global challenge that demands urgent and collective action.”
6. Wide shot, journalists, participants, TV screens showing speaker
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Katrin Schneeberger, Director of the Federal Office for the Environment (FOEN), Switzerland:
“Contrary to some media reports, this is no call for a production cap. Clarifying this in informal meetings was an important message to producing countries. Reaching a shared understanding that measures are needed on both the production and consumption sides can help unlock the negotiations.”
8. Wide shot, journalists, participants, TV screens showing speaker
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Inger Andersen, Executive Director, United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP):
“What is sure is that no one wants to live with the plastic pollution. No one wants it in the soils, in the drinking water, let alone in our oceans and in our bodies.”
10. Wide shot, press room journalists, participants, TV screens showing speaker, control booths
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Inger Andersen, Executive Director, United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP):
“I had the privilege but also the heavy duty of visiting Pakistan right after the floods; these dreadful, dreadful, unbelievably catastrophic floods. And debris and plastic was a big part of the problem and so this is why we're here, to find a solution while not leaving anyone behind and while ensuring that the economic wheels would keep turning.”
12. Wide shot, journalists, photographers, participants
13. SOUNDBITE (English) Inger Andersen, Executive Director, United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP):
“Some will have to deal with reduction, others will have to deal with mechanical recycling and others will deal with alternatives. Let's see how we can get to this through the negotiations. I think there's a lot of good faith in the working group right now.”
14. Med shot, TV video journalists, journalists, control booths
15. SOUNDBITE (English) Inger Andersen, Executive Director, United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP):
“It begins with having global rules. That's really it. And that's what this treaty will enable; when there are global rules around how these things are managed, investors can see that they have predictability because they know that there's a market for what they collect and then there will be investments. Because all of a sudden, that thing that today's waste, tomorrow will have value.”
16. Various shots, journalists
Negotiations are under way at UN Geneva to agree on a legally binding treaty to curb plastic pollution, with delegates from nearly 180 countries attending.
“The world wants and indeed needs a plastic conventional treaty because the crisis is getting out of hand and people are frankly outraged,” said Inger Andersen, UNEP Executive Director of the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), the UN agency leading the talks. “We know that plastic is in our nature, in our oceans, and yes, even in our bodies…What is sure is that no one wants to live with the plastic pollution.”
Unless an international accord is inked, plastic production and waste is projected to triple by 2060, causing significant damage – including to our health - according to UNEP.
Switzerland’s top environment official Katrin Schneeberger echoed the call for a legally binding treaty, insisting that plastic waste “is choking our lakes, harming wildlife and threatening human health. This is more than just an environmental issue, it is a global challenge that demands urgent and collective action.”
Speaking to journalists on the sidelines of the treaty negotiations today (Aug 05), Schneeberger underscored that there was “no call for a production cap” by producing countries. “Reaching a shared understanding that measures are needed on both the production and consumption sides can help unlock the negotiations,” she said in her capacity as Director of the Swiss Federal Office for the Environment.
Supporters of a deal have compared it to the Paris Climate Accord in terms of its significance. They have also pointed to the pressure allegedly being brought to bear against a deal by petrostates, whose crude oil and natural gas provide the building blocks of plastics.
“We will not recycle our way out of the plastic pollution crisis: we need a systemic transformation to achieve the transition to a circular economy,” UNEP Executive Director Inger Andersen has insisted in previous comments on the need for global regulations on plastics.
With 10 days of talks scheduled on the treaty at the UN in Geneva, supporters of an accord hope that the deal will cover the full life cycle of plastics, from design to production and disposal.
The treaty should “promote plastic circularity and prevent leakage of plastics in the environment”, according to the text now guiding negotiations led by the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee (INC).
At 22 pages, the INC document contains 32 draft articles which will be discussed line by line. The text is designed to shape the future instrument and serves as a starting point for negotiations by countries meeting in Geneva.
“Some [countries] will have to deal with reduction, others will have to deal with mechanical recycling and others will deal with alternatives,” Andersen said. “Let’s see how we can get to this through the negotiations. I think there's a lot of good faith in the working group right now.”
The UNEP-led talks follow a decision in 2022 by Member States to meet and develop an international legally binding instrument to end the plastic pollution crisis, including in the marine environment, within two years.
The scale of the problem is massive, with straws, cups and stirrers, carrier bags and cosmetics containing microbeads just a few of the single-use products ending up in our oceans and landfill sites.
In comments to journalists, Andersen recalled touring Pakistan after deadly flooding killed more than 1,000 people in 2022 and seeing that debris and plastic were “a big part of the problem and so this is why we’re here, to find a solution while not leaving anyone behind and while ensuring that the economic wheels would keep turning”.
Campaigners gathering on the sidelines of the negotiations expressed their hopes for as ambitious a treaty as possible.
They included Shellan Saling, from California, who’s the interim chair of the Youth Plastic Action Network (YPAN). “Plastic affects everything from climate change to health to fertility to even birth defects; it affects physical disabilities, as well as invisible disabilities,” she told UN News. “People don't realize how much it actually impacts, and you know every single day we are impacted by plastic and without production cuts, it could get significantly worse.”
Any treaty inked in Geneva will have to be sufficiently robust to accommodate the needs of all countries of the world whose approach differs regarding plastic design, production, waste and recycling. It will also have to stand the test of time, Andersen said.
“It begins with having global rules, that's really it. And that's what this treaty will enable; when there are global rules around how these things are managed, investors can see that they have predictability because they know that there's a market for what they collect and then there will be investments. Because all of a sudden, that thing that today's waste, tomorrow will have value.”
According to the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee on Plastic Pollution, in 2024 alone, humanity was expected to consume more than 500 million tonnes of plastic. Of this, 399 million tonnes will become waste.
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