G7 plastics charter could be like Paris agreement for the oceans, says McKenna
OTTAWA — Environment Minister Catherine McKenna says the plastics charter she is negotiating with other G7 nations ahead of next month’s leaders’ summit in Quebec could be billed as a Paris-type agreement for ocean garbage.
McKenna tells The Canadian Press the talks are tough, but going well — and she’s confident Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will have something solid to present to other leaders in Charlevoix, Que., in June.
The plastics charter is to be a centrepiece element of the summit, where the environment is one of the themes Trudeau chose for Canada’s turn as the presidency of the G7.
McKenna says the charter will focus on a high-level policy approach that will include targets for reducing the amount of garbage in the oceans and call for domestic plans to meet those targets. Different studies suggest anywhere from 6 million tonnes to 10 million tonnes of plastic garbage ends up in the ocean each year. More than half of it comes from a small number of countries, mainly in Asia, where garbage collection is lacklustre at best.