Canada pushing to include Indigenous rights in United Nations plastics treaty
OTTAWA — Canada is pushing to bring language recognizing the rights of Indigenous Peoples back into a United Nations plastics pollution treaty.
Delegates from more than 170 countries are in Geneva this week and next to resume negotiations on a treaty which was supposed to be finalized last year in South Korea. The meetings in Busan were to be the fifth and final round of negotiations to develop an international, legally binding treaty to end plastic waste by 2040.
Scientists estimate more than 350 million tonnes of plastic are thrown out every year. Less than one-tenth is recycled and more than one-fifth ends up in the environment, where it is harmful to people and all forms of nature.
Canada was instrumental in bringing countries together to discuss a treaty and hosted the fourth round of talks in Ottawa in April 2024.


