NGO retracts ‘waste colonialism’ report blaming Asian countries for plastic pollution – the Guardian

Imperial Federation, map of the world showing the extent of the British Empire in 1886 by J. C. R. Colomb, published by MacClure & Co. (courtesy of Norman B. Leventhal Map Center CC BY 2.0 via Flickr).
Imperial Federation, map of the world showing the extent of the British Empire in 1886 by J. C. R. Colomb, published by MacClure & Co. (courtesy of Norman B. Leventhal Map Center CC BY 2.0 via Flickr).

Ocean Conservancy apologises for ‘false narrative’ of 2015 study that put blame for bulk of world’s plastic waste on five Asian states.

An environmental watchdog has retracted an influential report that blamed five Asian countries for the majority of plastic pollution in the ocean.

The report, Stemming the Tide, from the US-based environmental advocacy group Ocean Conservancy…was decried as “waste colonialism” by hundreds of environmental, health and social justice groups across Asia.

Stemming the Tide was written by the consultancy McKinsey, with a steering group including the World Wildlife Fund, the Coca-Cola Company, Dow Chemical and the American Chemistry Council.

In the statement on its website, Ocean Conservancy said it “failed to confront the root causes of plastic waste or incorporate the effects on the communities and NGOs working on the ground in the places most impacted by plastic pollution”. Including incineration and waste-to-energy as acceptable solutions to the plastic crisis was wrong, it said.

“We did not consider how these technologies support continued demand for plastic production and hamper the move to a circular economy and a zero-carbon future.”

“Further, by focusing so narrowly on one region of the world (east and south-east Asia), we created a narrative about who is responsible for the ocean plastic pollution crisis – one that failed to acknowledge the outsized role that developed countries, especially the United States, have played and continue to play in generating and exporting plastic waste to this very region. This too was wrong.”

 

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