Plastic waste is present in all the world’s ocean basins, including around remote islands, the poles and in the deep seas. Accumulating in the natural environment, plastics will only decompose over hundreds or even thousands of years.
A majority of marine plastic waste originates from land-based sources and is transported to the ocean through rivers, with the remaining share of debris coming from fishing activities, natural disasters and other sources. Marine debris encompasses macroplastics and microplastics which entangles or is ingested by species. Microplastics may travel up the food chain and pose potential risks to human health once ingested. Marine litter also leads to a range of socioeconomic impacts to tourism, fishing and aquaculture, and shipping.
Read the marine plastics pollution country Fact Sheet of the following countries: Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Myanmar, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.
- Plastic waste prevention
Plastics waste can be prevented by leveraging incentives along the value chain, as well as by addressing negative externalities associated with plastics production upstream, and plastics waste generation and littering downstream.
Plastic waste prevention is undergirded by four key levers for bending the plastics curve: stronger support for recycled (secondary) plastics markets; policies to boost technological innovation in plastics; more ambitious domestic policy measures; and greater international co-operation.
- Waste management
Improvement of waste management systems can help ensure adequate end-of-life treatment of plastic waste. It is estimated that 9% of plastic waste generated globally are is recycled and 19% is incinerated. The remainder is disposed of in landfills, via open burning or uncontrolled dumping, or released to the wider environment.
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The first of two reports, the Global Plastics Outlook: Economic Drivers, Environmental Impacts and Policy Options is the first report to comprehensively take stock of current plastics production, use and waste generation, uncover the underlying economic drivers and map the related environmental impacts on a global level. The report also identifies four key levers that are essential to bend the plastics curve: markets for recycled (secondary) plastics, technological innovation in plastics, domestic policy measures and international co-operation, including international financing.
Read more: Policy Highlights
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The second of two reports, Global Plastics Outlook: Policy Scenarios to 2060 provides a set of coherent projections on plastics to 2060, including plastics use and waste as well as the environmental impacts. Through a series of policy packages to bend the plastic curve, the Outlook demonstrates the environmental benefits and economic consequences of adopting more stringent policies.
Read more: Policy Highlights
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