Global plastic recycling rates ‘stagnant’ at under 10pc

By AFP
April 11, 2025
Representational image shows people searching and collecting recycled items from a heap of garbage in Faisalabad on March 27, 2024. — APP
Representational image shows people searching and collecting recycled items from a heap of garbage in Faisalabad on March 27, 2024. — APP

PARIS: The amount of plastic being recycled around the world is stagnant at less than 10 percent with most new plastic still made from fossil fuels, a new study said on Thursday.

Researchers from Tsinghua University in China said the rate of recycling had barely budged even as plastic production had exploded, presenting a “pressing global environmental challenge”.

Their findings, published in the journal Communications Earth & Environment, come as nations prepare to battle again over a treaty to address plastic pollution after the last round of negotiations failed to broker an agreement.

Plastic has been found in the depths of the remotest oceans and in snow atop the highest mountains, and tiny particles have been detected in blood and breast milk. Yet despite growing international concern, there has been “a notable lack of comprehensive analysis of plastics along their supply chain”, wrote Quanyin Tan and colleagues.