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News Details |
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25 Countries Unite in the Fight Against Plastic Pollution |
24/1/2025 |
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- The Global Plastic Action Partnership (GPAP) reaches 25-country milestone, becoming the largest global programme tackling plastic pollution, now impacting over 1.5 billion people.
- Seven new countries - Angola, Bangladesh, Gabon, Guatemala, Kenya, Senegal, and Tanzania - join forces to scale systemic plastic waste management solutions, fostering greater sustainability and climate resilience worldwide.
- By promoting circularity, GPAP helps reduce emissions from the plastics sector, spur economic growth through green jobs and protect land and ocean ecosystems.
- Learn more about GPAP here. Follow the Annual Meeting here and on social media using #WEF25
Davos-Klosters, Switzerland, 23 January 2025 – The World Economic Forum’s Global Plastic Action Partnership (GPAP) has recently welcomed seven new members - Angola, Bangladesh, Gabon, Guatemala, Kenya, Senegal, and Tanzania - bringing its impact-focused global network to 25 countries with a combined population of over 1.5 billion people. This marks a pivotal milestone in the fight against plastic pollution and solidifies GPAP as the largest global initiative dedicated to tackling its root causes and advancing a circular plastics economy worldwide. The growing community will continue to drive systemic solutions to key challenges such as advancing sustainable materials, strengthening recycling systems, tackling greenhouse gas emissions, and more.
The seven new countries bring fresh momentum and new perspectives to GPAP’s mission of amplifying impact, enabling best practice sharing and strengthening national and international efforts to reduce plastic pollution. Central to GPAP’s model are National Action Roadmaps – tailored, country-specific strategies informed by the network’s collective experience. These have already mobilized $3.1 billion in investments, created safer jobs for informal waste workers and supported countries in achieving measurable progress on sustainability and climate resilience.
“Reaching this 25-nation milestone is not just a celebration of numbers, it’s a testament to the growing global determination to tackle one of the world’s most pressing challenges,” said Clemence Schmid, Director of GPAP, World Economic Forum. “These partnerships are not just symbolic, they represent concrete commitments to rethinking how plastics are produced, managed and reused. Together we are charting a path towards a circular plastics economy that benefits people and planet.”
Plastic waste continues to pose an urgent global challenge. With 6 million tonnes entering oceans each year and over twice that amount polluting land, mismanaged plastic waste is severely disrupting ecosystems, harming biodiversity and threatening human health and livelihoods across the world. By uniting 25 nations under a shared framework, GPAP will drive collaborative action and innovative solutions that can help nations halt plastic waste leakage, transition to sustainable materials and protect ecosystems and livelihoods from its cascading negative impacts.
Looking ahead, GPAP will continue to bring countries and other stakeholders together to build a circular economy for plastic across its entire life cycle and transform waste materials into valuable resources that can drive sustainable, equitable and resilient economic growth for all.
PHOTO: UNDP Armenia
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