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Delegates say there was no consensus reached at the Geneva talks on a binding plastic treaty

Delegates say there was no consensus reached at the Geneva talks on a binding plastic treaty

According to delegates, no consensus was reached in Geneva during the talks on the first legally-binding treaty for combating plastic pollution.

"South Africa regrets that this session was unable to reach a legally binding agreement and the positions are still far apart", its delegate said at a meeting on Friday morning.

After a failed meeting of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee in South Korea at the end of last year, more than 1,000 delegates gathered in Geneva to begin the sixth round.

The United Nations Environment Assembly established the INC in 2022. Its mandate was to create a global, legally-binding treaty on plastic pollution.

On Thursday, the countries were scrambling to build a bridge.

Deep divisions

The extent of future curbs.

Diplomats and climate advocates had warned earlier this month that efforts by the EU and small island states to cap virgin plastic production - fuelled by petroleum, coal and gas - are threatened by opposition from petrochemical-producing countries and the U.S. under President Donald Trump.

The main issues are capping production, managing chemicals and plastics of concern, as well as financing to assist developing countries in implementing the treaty. (Reporting and writing by Emma Farge; editing by Jacqueline Wong, Christian Schmollinger and Miranda Murray)

(source: Reuters)