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Added: May 04, 2022
Last edited: Apr 28, 2023
The project 'Rethinking Plastics - Circular Economy Solutions to Marine Litter' is focusing on solutions regarding the transition towards a circular economy with the aim of reducing plastic waste leakage into the sea. It considers 7 counties of China, Indonesia, Japan, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. Key areas of the pilot projects are consumption and production, waste management and ports and fisheries encouraging green public procurement, awareness rising and education.
The project offer advising, promoting knowledge exchange and best practice sharing through policy dialogues, workshops and conferences as well as implementing activities in more than 20 pilot projects in China, Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam to examine new approaches and develop best practices.
The amount of single-use packaging is extremely growing worldwide due to the rapid urbanization, economic development and changing consumption and production patterns. Apart from that, there is a lack of efficient waste management in terms of collection, sorting, recycling, energy recovery and disposal of packaging waste. Hence, these problems contribute to marine littering which impacts on marine ecosystems and fisheries, as well as the tourism sector. Marine litter affects over 800 species in marine and coastal environments. About 60 to 90% of marine litter consists of plastics (e.g. single-use plastic products and packaging).
Referring to the current issues of single-use plastic and packaging, circular economy strategies introduced as a solution to tackle with marine litter. Circular design for packaging, Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) for packaging, plastic waste management and green public procurement are among many solutions.
Here are some of the examples of the initiatives for each country:
China
- Improving Ship Waste Management in Chinese Commercial Ports
- Fishing for Litter in Hainan
Indonesia
- Single-Use Plastic Free Schools
- Less Plastic Waste in Indonesian Market
Philippines
- Reduction of Plastic Waste in Iloilo City
- Promoting Innovative and Sustainable Packaging
Singapore
-‘EPR & Beyond‘: EU-Singapore Dialogue on Circular Economy
Thailand
- A Circular Economy for Islands
- Households Fit for Recycling
Vietnam
- Volunteer Team: Engaging the Fishing Community in Plastics Collection
- A Better Ship Waste Handling in Vietnamese Ports
Governments, businesses, academia and civil society have realized the importance of the transition towards a circular economy to tackle marine litter which meets the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
Photo by Brian Yurasits on Unsplash
Inform
Circular Economy in school programmes
Manage
Mobilise
Govern the Transition
Institutional design to enable circularity
Cross-departmental collaboration and engagement
Convene Towards Action
Advocate for circular change
Voluntary agreements around circular ambitions
Regulate
Regulation
Public Procurement