UN Treaty business coalition

Global businesses and NGOs endorse a common vision for an ambitious global plastics treaty

Banner promoting business coalition for a global plastics treaty
  • 83 organisations including major global businesses, financial institutions, and NGOs have announced a common vision for an effective and ambitious Global Treaty to End Plastic Pollution.
  • The Ellen MacArthur Foundation and WWF are announcing plans to launch a Business Coalition for a Global Plastics Treaty to convene organisations aligned with this vision to ensure a strong and ambitious voice for business in the upcoming negotiation.
  • TOMRA is a member of the business coalition and believes a UN treaty on Plastic Pollution has the power to catalyse the swift implementation of systems addressing the plastic pollution crisis at scale and forging the path towards a circular economy for plastics.

TOMRA strives for a world without waste, where as an interim target by 2030, 40% of post-consumer plastic packaging will be collected for recycling, and 30% will be recycled in a closed loop. To meet these ambitious commitments and put an end to plastic pollution, we must implement proven waste management and recycling systems with immediate effect. 

Tove Andersen, TOMRA President and CEO
Tove Andersen TOMRA President and CEO

Global businesses across the plastics value chain, financial institutions, and non-governmental organisations (NGOs) came together today to announce a common vision for an effective and ambitious Global Treaty to End Plastic Pollution. The vision will form the basis for future policy engagements with governments through a newly launched Business Coalition for a Global Plastics Treaty which will be convened by the Ellen MacArthur Foundation and WWF.

Building on previous efforts to raise the business voice in favour of starting intergovernmental negotiations, the organisations standing behind the vision see the global treaty as the single most important opportunity to accelerate progress towards a circular economy in which plastic never becomes waste or pollution, and the value of products and materials is retained in the economy. The treaty negotiation process, which is expected to conclude at the end of 2024, will largely determine the trajectory of the plastic pollution crisis for generations to come.

“The plastic crisis extends beyond all borders, impacting the health of our oceans and wildlife, and the livelihoods of people from major cities to small coastal communities. The scope and scale of this global issue must be met with equally ambitious solutions,” said Erin Simon, Vice President and Head of Plastic Waste and Business, WWF. “We have no time to waste. The need for global coordination to tackle the plastic pollution crisis has never been more urgent, a Business Coalition for a Global Plastics Treaty will push strongly for a framework that leaves the business-as-usual approach at the door and ushers us into a new era where ending plastic pollution is finally within reach.”

Global Plastics Treaty banner focusing on "no time to waste"

Ahead of the first Intergovernmental Negotiation Committee (INC) meeting scheduled for the end of November this year, the endorsing organisations are calling out the need for a global treaty which sets common goals, rules and obligations that member states will be required to implement within their national jurisdictions. For businesses and investors, this means creating a level playing field and preventing a patchwork of disconnected solutions.

In a strong signal of their ambition for the negotiation process, the endorsing organisations agree that the treaty must support progress on a number of key outcomes including the reduction of plastic production and use through a circular economy approach, increased circulation of necessary plastic and the prevention and remediation of hard-to-abate micro- and macro-plastic leakage into the environment. The list of organisations endorsing the common vision highlights the high-level of agreement between businesses across the plastics value chain and supporting organisations on the need to define a comprehensive and coordinated set of upstream and downstream policy measures that help achieve our desired global outcomes and are adaptable to local conditions.

The Ellen MacArthur Foundation and WWF will convene organisations aligned with this vision to develop ambitious policy recommendations, engage with treaty negotiators, and build confidence in the business community on the benefits and necessity of an effective global plastics treaty.

Banner promoting business coalition for a global plastics treaty

“Many companies and countries are already taking important steps to address plastic pollution, but voluntary action alone cannot reach the scale we need to urgently solve this crisis. An ambitious global plastics treaty is required. That is why today we are announcing, in partnership with WWF, plans to form a Business Coalition for a Global Plastics Treaty. This coalition will bring together businesses from across the plastics value chain to support the development of an ambitious and effective treaty – one that accelerates the transition to a circular economy and ensures the value of products and materials is not lost but retained. Plastic can no longer be allowed to become waste or pollution,” said Rob Opsomer, Executive Lead - Systemic Initiatives, Ellen MacArthur Foundation.

The organisations endorsing the common vision for a global plastics treaty are committed to working closely with governments to raise the bar of ambition in the negotiation process, and are calling for more businesses from across the plastic value chain to engage with us on the development of a Business Coalition for a Global Plastics Treaty. Together, we can amplify our call for a legally binding effective treaty to end plastic pollution.

TOMRA President and CEO Tove Andersen holding empty plastic bottles
Tove Andersen, TOMRA President and CEO

More information about the organisations endorsing the common vision for a global plastics treaty.