Demonstrators march through Ottawa, call for end to plastic pollution - Action News
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Ottawa

Demonstrators march through Ottawa, call for end to plastic pollution

Sunday's march and rally took place ahead of intergovernmental talks being held this week in Ottawa, intended to come up with a legally binding agreement on plastic pollution.

Rally comes ahead of Earth Day, international talks in nation's capital

A crowd of demonstrators walk down a street carrying a banner that reads
Demonstrators marched Sunday from Parliament Hill down Wellington Street to the Shaw Centre, where talks are set to take place this week on how to address global plastic pollution. (Camille Kasisi-Monet/CBC)

Demonstrators from around the world marched through Ottawa's downtown coreSunday demanding an end to plastic pollution and a reductionin single-use plastics.

The march took place ahead of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee'sfourth meeting(INC-4)on plastic pollution, which is set to begin Tuesday in the nation's capital.

In 2022,175 nations of the UN Environmental Assembly voted to develop a legally binding agreement on plastic pollution, with the goal of forging a draft agreement by the end of 2024.

They also established the negotiating committee, which has since met three times and convenes again inOttawa fromApril 23 to 29.

According to organizers, thegoal of Sunday's March to End the Plastic Era, as it was called, wastoremind negotiators of the people affected by plastics particularly Indigenous peoples.

Key demands includereducing pollution across the entire life cycle of plastics by limiting their production, as well assupporting non-toxic recycling andimplementing regulations on plastic waste trade.

"If we don't centre our people in these negotiations and these talks, then it's going to be to the detriment of Mother Earth," said Suzanne Smoke, the outreach co-ordinator for the Society of Native Nations, addressingthe crowd of protesters.

Plastic production and waste is set to triple globally by 2060, according to Environment and Climate Change Canada. As much as 37 million tonnes of plastic pollution could be entering the oceans every year by 2040.

In Canada alone, more than three million tonnes of plastic are tossedout annually,with only nine per cent of that being recycled.

This week'sconference is a step toward ending plastic pollution by 2040, Minister of Environment and Climate Change Steven Guilbeault said in a press release.

"The rate at which we are all consuming plastics is simply unsustainable, and it is only by rallying together that we can solve it," he said.

"We are taking some big steps at home to cut the amount of plastics that go into landfills and the environment, but tackling this problem can't happen without a global solution."

A teen girl dressed in a costume made of plastic waste stands on a lawn outdoors and holds a protest sign.
AeshninaAzzahra, 16,came all the way from Indonesia where she is an activist trying to clean up plastics from local rivers to attend a march and rally in Ottawa on April 21, 2024, ahead of plastics treaty negotiations set for later in the week. (Natalia Goodwin/CBC)

Some countries 'blocking progress'

Environmental Defence, one of the groups behind Sunday's rally, said it'sdisappointed in the progress the committee which last met in Nairobi, Kenya has made so far.

"Acertain number of countries are, I would say, blocking progress and [are] very much supported by the petrochemical and plastics industry who don't want to see change," said Karen Wirsig, Environmental Defence's senior program manager for plastics.

"But the world really cannot sustain this use of plastics that we have."

Wirsig said Canada has made gains through projects like the federal plastic ban, though it'scurrently in the midst of a court challenge and appeal process.

Still, Wirsigwould like to see more.

"We need to see Canada step up on measures, global measures, that Canada would also follow to control and start cutting down on plastic production and use," she said.

"Instead, what we're seeing from Canada is, you know, continued subsidies to plastic production and petrochemical production."

Plastics don't go away, say protestors

Many of the international guests at the rally spokeof the effects plastics are having on their communities.

AeshninaAzzahra, 16,travelled from Indonesia where she is an activist trying to clean up plastics from local rivers.

Azzahra said many of the items she's found come from western countries that are sending their waste to developing nations an issue she'd like to see addressed in any treaty.

"Their plastic waste is usually being burned, and it will contaminate the free-range chicken eggs, and we will eat those eggs also. The plastic waste will be also dumped to the river," she said.

"The developing countries especially in my country, Indonesia we don't really have good waste management. We still have a lot of waste problems, plastic problems. So please, don't add more burden to us."

The rally also comes the day before Earth Day, with the theme this year being "planet vs. plastics."

Many people don't realize how pervasive microplasticsin particular can be, said Tom Cosgrove, chief creative and content officer at earthday.org.

"It's crossed into our blood, it's in our heart, it's in our lungs, it's in our food supply, it's in the air we breathe. It'severywhere,"Cosgrovesaid.

"So we're really trying to push for a reduction in plastic production 60 per centby 2040 because we really feel ... the only way to attack the problem is [to] make less plastics."

Hear from demonstrators at the march in Ottawa and a senior plastics campaigner at Oceana Canada, Anthony Merante.