PARIS, May 27 — Lobbyists Greenpeace unveiled an artwork in Paris today in the shape of a machine churning out bottles in front of an oil derrick to coincide with talks on eliminating plastic waste.

Canadian artist Benjamin Von Wong said his 5-metre-high work by the River Seine showed the link between fossil fuels and plastic pollution, which could triple in the next four decades.

With only about 9 per cent of waste recycled from 460 million tonnes of plastic produced each year, the UN-organised Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee on Plastic Pollution (INC-2) aims for a legally-binding pact to eliminate more.

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“If we do not act, by 2050 there will be more plastic than fish in the oceans,” French Foreign Affairs Minister Catherine Colonna tweeted yesterday, quoting the United Nations.

France hosted a launching ceremony for the talks yesterday. Technical discussions will run Monday-Friday.

The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) said last year that global plastic waste could triple by 2060. But the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) said this month that countries could reduce it 80 per cent by 2040 using existing technologies and making major policy changes.

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“We hope this machine will serve as an unflinching visual reminder of the urgency of this issue,” artist Von Wong said, according to Greenpeace’s website.

Paris also saw protests yesterday by climate campaigners at the annual general meeting of TotalEnergies. — Reuters

Guests stand next to Canadian artist and activist Benjamin Von Wong's 5-metre tall art installation the ‘PerpetualPlastic Machine’ during its unveiling ceremony on the banks of the Seine River in Paris on May 27, 2023, for the Global Plastics Treaty to stop runaway plastic and use. — AFP pic
Guests stand next to Canadian artist and activist Benjamin Von Wong's 5-metre tall art installation the ‘PerpetualPlastic Machine’ during its unveiling ceremony on the banks of the Seine River in Paris on May 27, 2023, for the Global Plastics Treaty to stop runaway plastic and use. — AFP pic