The plan aims to increase total recycling from 14 per cent currently to 70 per cent of total plastic packaging.
The plan, presented here in a report by the WEF and the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, observed that there could be"more plastics than fish (by weight) in the ocean by 2050 if no action is taken immediately".
The report saidthat 20 per cent of plastic packaging could be profitably reused, for example by replacing single-use plastic bags with re-usable alternatives or designing innovative packaging models based on product refill.
This could bring in an additional USD 90 to USD 140 per tonne of mixed plastics.
Also Read
Without fundamental redesign and innovation, the remaining 30 per cent of plastic packaging(by weight) will never be recycled and the equivalent of 10 billion garbage bags per year will be destined to landfill or incineration.
"The New Plastics Economy initiative has attracted wide-spread support, and across the industry we are seeing strong initial momentum and alignment on the direction to take. The New Plastics Economy: Catalysing actionprovides a clear plan for redesigning the global plastics system, paving the way for concerted action," saidDame Ellen MacArthur, Founder, Ellen MacArthur Foundation.
One of the signatories to the plan, Malati Gadgil, Treasurer of Kagad Kach Patra Kashtakari Panchayat, said, "Through first-hand experience, KKPKP knows how recyclable plastics create income for waste pickers in India.
"The New Plastics Economy initiative attempts to ambitiously take a detailed and long-term view onthe trade with a multi-pronged approach of value enhancement - critical for informal recyclers - and format and delivery model redesign for plastics packaging."
"This new report has tremendous potential to influence policy at the global and local levels and we look forward to how it will impact the recycling economy," Gadgil said.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content