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Plastic pollution is growing relentlessly as waste management and recycling fall short, says OECD

Globally, only 9% of plastic waste is recycled while 22% is mismanaged

Share of plastics treated by waste management category, after disposal of recycling residues and collected litter, 2019

Mismanaged & uncollected litter

Landfilled

Incinerated

Recycled

‎WORLD‎‎NON-OECD AVERAGE‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎Other non-OECD AsiaOther EurasiaOther EUOther AfricaMiddle East & North AfricaLatin AmericaIndiaChina‎‎‎OECD AVERAGE‎‎‎‎OECD AsiaOECD OceaniaOther OECD EuropeOECD EU countriesOther OECD AmericaUnited StatesCanada

OECD countries are behind 14% of overall plastic leakage. Within that, OECD countries account for 11% of macroplastics leakage and 35% of microplastics leakage. The Outlook notes that international co-operation on reducing plastic pollution should include supporting lower-income countries in developing better waste management infrastructure to reduce their plastic leakage.

The report finds that the COVID-19 crisis led to a 2.2% decrease in plastics use in 2020 as economic activity slowed, but a rise in littering, food takeaway packaging and plastic medical equipment such as masks has driven up littering. As economic activity resumed in 2021, plastics consumption has also rebounded.

Reducing pollution from plastics will require action, and international co-operation, to reduce plastic production, including through innovation, better product design and developing environmentally friendly alternatives, as well as efforts to improve waste management and increase recycling.

Bans and taxes on single-use plastics exist in more than 120 countries but are not doing enough to reduce overall pollution. Most regulations are limited to items like plastic bags, which make up a tiny share of plastic waste, and are more effective at reducing littering than curbing plastics consumption. Landfill and incineration taxes that incentivise recycling only exist in a minority of countries. The Outlook calls for greater use of instruments such as Extended Producer Responsibility schemes for packaging and durables, landfill taxes, deposit-refund and Pay-as-You-Throw systems.

Most plastics in use today are virgin – or primary – plastics, made from crude oil or gas. Global production of plastics from recycled – or secondary – plastics has more than quadrupled from 6.8 million tonnes (Mt) in 2000 to 29.1 Mt in 2019, but this is still only 6% of the size of total plastics production. More needs to be done to create a separate and well-functioning market for recycled plastics, which are still viewed as substitutes for virgin plastic. Setting recycled content targets and investing in improved recycling technologies could help to make secondary markets more competitive and profitable.

Some key findings from the Outlook:

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