Ocean Plastics Charter
Ambition
Marine plastic litter is a global problem that requires global action to bring real change. On June 9, 2018, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, the United Kingdom, and the European Union adopted the Ocean Plastics Charter to demonstrate their commitment to take concrete and ambitious action to address the problem.
The Charter lays the groundwork to ensure plastics are designed for reuse and recycling. By signing the Charter, our partners commit to a more resource-efficient and lifecycle approach to plastics stewardship on land and at sea. Through partnerships with businesses, international organizations and other countries, we can grow the momentum for real action on plastic pollution around the world.
Aim and scope
The Charter brings together leading governments, businesses and civil society organizations to support its objectives and commit to taking action to move toward a more resource efficient and sustainable approach to the management of plastics.
Partners
Our partners are invited to implement the objectives and commitments of the Charter within their respective jurisdictions and area of influence. They are also invited to report on their progress in implementing the Charter through their own reporting processes and mechanisms.
Governments
*New
- Canada
- European Union
- France
- Germany
- Italy
- United Kingdom
- Jamaica
- Kenya
- Mexico
- Norway
- Marshall Islands
- Netherlands
- Senegal
- Nauru
- Palau
- Cabo Verde
- Myanmar
- Samoa
- Costa Rica
- Monaco
- Fiji
- Peru
- Rwanda
- Finland
- Chile
- Panama
- Belgium
- *Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)
Global partners
*New
- IKEA
- International Union for Conservation of Nature
- Nestle
- PepsiCo
- Plastics Oceans International
- The Coca-Cola Company
- Unilever
- Volvo Car Group
- Walmart
Canadian partners
*New
- A&W Food Services of Canada Inc.
- BASF Canada
- Clean Foundation
- Develop Nova Scotia
- Earth Rangers
- Enerkem
- Great Sea Project
- Keurig Dr Pepper Canada
- Loop Industries Inc.
- Ocean Wise
- Oceans North
- Organic Ocean Seafood
- Schad Foundation
- Sitka Foundation
- Students on Ice
- The Tare Shop
- *Ocean Legacy Foundation
Regional Partners
*New
- ACME Containers Limited
- African Institute at the University of Lagos
- BIDCO Africa Limited
- BioCellection
- *Biodegradable Future
- Capwell Industries LTD
- Coca Cola Beverages Africa-Kenya
- Cooper K Brands LTD
- Dunia Designs
- General Plastics
- General Printers Limited
- Global Initiatives
- Greenplast International LTD
- Kenya Association of Manufacturers (KAM)
- Kenya Association of Tour Operators
- KEPSA/Sustainable Inclusive Business
- Kevian Kenya Ltd
- Kibra Green
- *Kind Human Solutions
- Mayers Natural Spring Water - Kenya
- Melvin Marsh International Limited
- One More Generation
- OneLessStraw
- ONG PAGE VERTE
- Packaging Industries Limited
- Pan African Vision for the Environment
- PETCO Kenya
- Plastic Energy
- Polyflex Industries Limited
- Precovery Labs
- Pride Industries Limited
- Prowave
- PyroCore ltd
- RecycleGO
- RICE A/S
- Scrumptious Eats Kenya
- Sea Going Green
- Sitra, the Finnish Innovation Fund
- Skanem Interlabels Nairobi Limited
- Sky PLC
- Stop! MicroWaste
- Sunworld Safaris
- Sustainable Environmental Development Watch (Suswatch)
- T3 (Trash Thread Textile)
- Techpak Industries Limited
- Turtle Bags
- Unilever East Africa
- University of Nairobi
- X-Calibur Construction Chemistry (EA) Ltd
How to endorse
If you are interested in becoming a partner in support of the Ocean Plastics Charter you can send an expression of interest to endorse to ec.chartesurlesplastiquesplasticscharter.ec@canada.ca. Partners are invited to specify their intent to work to implement the full Charter or focus on specific areas in accordance with their jurisdiction and areas of influence.
Expressions of endorsement are accepted from the Chief Executive Officer or President of an organisation and from the Minister of Environment, Minister of Foreign Affairs, or the head of state of a government.
Read the Ocean Plastics Charter
Plastics are one of the most revolutionary inventions of the past century and play an important role in our economy and daily lives. However, the current approach to producing, using, managing and disposing of plastics poses a significant threat to the environment, to livelihoods and potentially to human health. It also represents a significant loss of value, resources and energy.
We commit to move toward a more resource-efficient and sustainable approach to the management of plastics. We resolve to take a lifecycle approach to plastics stewardship on land and at sea, which aims to avoid unnecessary use of plastics and prevent waste, and to ensure that plastics are designed for recovery, reuse, recycling and end-of-life management to prevent waste through various policy measures.
We endeavor to increase the efficient use of resources while strengthening waste diversion systems and infrastructure to collect and process plastic materials and recapture the value of plastics in the economy, thereby reducing greenhouse gas emissions and preventing waste and litter from being released into the environment.
We seek to stimulate innovation for sustainable solutions, technologies and alternatives across the lifecycle to enable consumers and businesses to change their behavior. We will work to mobilize and support collaborative government, industry, academia, citizen and youth-led initiatives. We also recognize the need for action in line with previous G7 commitments and the 2030 Agenda, which sets a global framework for sustainable development.
We commit to take action toward a resource-efficient lifecycle management approach to plastics in the economy by:
1. Sustainable design, production and after-use markets
- Working with industry towards 100% reusable, recyclable, or, where viable alternatives do not exist, recoverable, plastics by 2030.
- Taking into account the full environmental impacts of alternatives, significantly reducing the unnecessary use of single-use plastics.
- Using green public procurement to reduce waste and support secondary plastics markets and alternatives to plastic.
- Working with industry towards increasing recycled content by at least 50% in plastic products where applicable by 2030.
- Supporting secondary markets for plastics including using policy measures and developing international incentives, standards or requirements for product stewardship, design and recycled content.
- Working with industry towards reducing the use of plastic microbeads in rinse-off cosmetic and personal care consumer products, to the extent possible by 2020, and addressing other sources of microplastics.
2. Collection, management and other systems and infrastructure
- Working with industry and other levels of government, to recycle and reuse at least 55% of plastic packaging by 2030 and recover 100% of all plastics by 2040.
- Increasing domestic capacity to manage plastics as a resource, prevent their leakage into the marine environment from all sources, and enable their collection, reuse, recycling, recovery and/or environmentally-sound disposal.
- Encouraging the application of a whole supply chain approach to plastic production toward greater responsibility and prevent unnecessary loss, including in pre-production plastic pellets.
- Accelerating international action and catalyzing investments to address marine litter in global hot spots and vulnerable areas through public-private funding and capacity development for waste and wastewater management infrastructure, innovative solutions and coastal clean-up.
- Working with relevant partners, in particular local governments, to advance efforts to reduce marine litter and plastics waste, notably but not exclusively in small island and remote communities, including through raising awareness.
3. Sustainable lifestyles and education
- Strengthening measures, such as market-based instruments, to prevent plastics from entering the oceans, and strengthening standards for labelling to enable consumers to make sustainable decisions on plastics, including packaging.
- Supporting industry leadership initiatives and fostering knowledge exchange through existing alliances and other mechanisms.
- Promoting the leadership role of women and youth as promoters of sustainable consumption and production practices.
- Support platforms for information sharing to foster awareness and education efforts on preventing and reducing plastic waste generation, plastics pollution and eliminating marine litter.
4. Research, innovation and new technologies
- Assessing current plastics consumption and undertaking prospective analysis on the level of plastic consumption by major sector use, while identifying and encouraging the elimination of unnecessary uses.
- Calling on G7 Ministers of Environment at their forthcoming meeting to advance new initiatives, such as a G7 Plastics Innovation Challenge, to promote research and development of new and more sustainable technologies, design or production methods by the private sector and innovators to address plastics waste in the oceans with a focus on all stages of the production and supply chain.
- Promoting the research, development and use of technologies to remove plastics and microplastics from waste water and sewage sludge.
- Guiding the development and appropriate use of new innovative plastic materials and alternatives to ensure they are not harmful to the environment.
- Harmonizing G7 science-based monitoring methodologies.
- Collaborating on research on the sources and fate of plastics and their impact on human and marine health.
5. Coastal and shoreline action
- Encouraging campaigns on marine litter in G7 countries with youth and relevant partners to raise public awareness, collect data and remove debris from coasts and shorelines globally.
- Accelerating implementation of the 2015 G7 Leaders’ Action Plan to Combat Marine Litter through the Regional Seas Programs, initiatives led by RFMOs, where appropriate, and targeted investments for clean-up activities that prove to be environmentally sound in global hotspots and priority areas, in particular on Abandoned, Lost or Otherwise Discarded Fishing Gears (ALDFG) and wastes generated and collected by fishery activities.
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