Fears grow over rising number of oil lobbyists at UN plastic pollution talks
by Sandra Laville from on (#6MBAG)
Proposed global treaty to curb production represents challenge to producers of fossil fuels, from which most plastics are made
The number of fossil fuel and petrochemical industry lobbyists at UN talks to agree the first global treaty to cut plastic pollution has increased by more than a third, according to an analysis.
Most plastic is made from fossil fuels, via a chemical process known as cracking, and 196 lobbyists from both industries are at the UN talks in Ottawa, Canada, where countries are attempting to come to an agreement to curb plastic production as part of a treaty to cut global plastic waste, according to analysis by the Center for International Environmental Law (Ciel).
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