Expert urges global 'avoidance and prudence’ to eliminate plastic pollution

Marine biologist underscores the need for individual and state-level responsibility amidst ongoing UN negotiations on a global plastics treaty.

Bottled water found to contain high levels of nano plastics, posing health risks including brain, placental, and breast milk exposure, experts warn. / Photo: Getty Images
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Bottled water found to contain high levels of nano plastics, posing health risks including brain, placental, and breast milk exposure, experts warn. / Photo: Getty Images

The principle of "avoidance and prudence” should be the motto for both individuals and states on using plastics in all aspects of life, according to a concerned academic.

Sedat Gundogdu, a marine biologist at Cukurova University in the southern Turkish city of Adana, told Anadolu that he has been doing research into plastic pollution as he serves on a board of spokespersons of a coalition of scientists pushing for an effective plastics agreement.

“Together with this coalition, we are trying to voluntarily provide scientific information to states participating in negotiations of a UN plastics agreement for use in negotiations,” he said.

There have been three negotiations about the treaty so far – in Uruguay, Kenya and France, and the fourth is planned for Canada next April, he noted.

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Russian oil producer Gazprom Neft in Moscow. / Photo: Reuters Archive

On the content of the agreement, he explained: “A zero draft, in which various options were presented for pollution and production related to all kinds of plastics - including the chemicals used – with several options to states, has been published.”

“Especially the big oil-producing states, including Iran, China, Saudi Arabia and Russia, have formed a group of ‘like-minded countries’ that the items in the zero draft should be removed from the negotiations, and they have taken a stance that it should be rewritten,” he said.

Noting that those states expressed that there is no need for a zero draft, no need to talk about plastic pollution and reducing the production of plastic, he said instead they demanded that if there is going to be a zero draft, it should mention the “cyclicality and benefits of plastic.”

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‘Principle of avoidance and prudence’

Gundogdu also underlined the need for a consensus, especially Article A of the treaty, which has “the most preventive proposals.”

If states can manage to have a consensus on the article, then “it will ultimately result in a situation such as reducing plastic production by close to 40% in the next five or 10 years,” said Gundogdu.

On what individuals can do to reduce the contamination of ecosystems with plastic and reduce the use of the material, Gundogdu said individual precautions might fall short as it is a “systematical issue.”

Underlining the importance of applying ”the principle of avoidance and prudence" by everyone, he indicated: “It is only through behaviors and consumption habits that you should stay away from plastic as much as possible and not require the need to use plastic as much as possible.”

'Serious amounts of nano plastics in bottled water'

Touching on the drinkable water issue, he warned: “There are very serious amounts of nano plastics in bottled water in plastic packaging, and we know that these nano plastics reach the human brain, reach the placenta, reach breast milk.

“So the main thing that needs to be done is to have an environment where people will not have to drink water in a pet bottle, and the water flowing from the fountain is drinkable,” he suggested. “Ensuring this should again be one of the main tasks of local governments.”

“Again, local governments need to invest more in waste management infrastructure,” he said. “Because if paving, asphalt or landscaping is a widely performed service, waste management is much, much more important than that.”

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