Plastics are choking our waterways and ending up on our dinner tables: Sherry

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Islamabad
Federal Minister for Climate Change Senator Sherry Rehman, speaking at the 1st National Plastic Action Partnership Steering Committee & National Stakeholders Consultation workshop on Plastics Free Rivers and Seas for South Asia (PLEASE), addressed stakeholders from across the country and abroad on strengthening innovation and coordination of circular economy solution to plastic pollution flowing through Pakistani rivers, mainly the Indus River.
Federal Minister Sherry Rehman called for urgent need for creation of incentives for the end users of single-use plastics in the society, as plastic pollution is one of the most significant barriers towards the on-going and future environmental interventions. The Minister emphasized, “ While we can force penalties in some areas and ban single use plastics, penalties alone are not the solution.
There won’t be a shift towards a plastic-free society no matter how much we speak about it or use the right jargon on the circularity of the economy if we don’t address the basic issues. In the near future, there will be more plastics in the seas than fish and Pakistan’s ocean and seas will be most exposed.
Right now, we are in public-private partnerships with Coca-Cola to clean up the Malir River. But these are cleanups and there are not the cycles that will lead to ridding our environment and our water bodies of the polluting plastics.”
The Federal Minister said that people are ingesting microplastics everyday through consumption of seafood, making it a crisis of our own creation that impacts our nutrition through plastic pollution.
“Law making itself won’t be enough to tackle this, and there is a need to create a better governance structure. Until we disincentivize the end user from using plastic and relentlessly educate the masses on the gravity of the issue, no actual change can be seen.”
While Minister Rehman appreciated the data and analyses the stakeholders shared, she remarked, “To find solutions and interventions that incentivize the poor segments of the society, mainly the lower income quintile group at the bottom of the social pyramid, think how the poor think, and you will end the plastic problem. Once you give them a viable, circular economy they can buy-in to without spending a huge fortune, that will help kickstart the process.
We are in the process of chalking out a Plastics National Action Plan. The interventions now need scale otherwise they will end up being little ribbon-cutting exercises for publicity without any actionable outcomes.”
The Federal Minister, while highlighting the urgency of the matter, said that “Pakistan is facing the largest climate event of the century as there is no example in living memory of 33 million people affected by a single catastrophe. While the country adapts to a very uncertain, contingent, and unpredictable future, plastics are going to complicate our adaptation process and will hurtle us towards a 3°C world.”