Publications

Inclusion of the Informal Recycling Sector in a Global Agreement on Plastic Pollution

The IKHAPP team would like to thank the presenters for their original contributions to the webinar: “Important but ignored? The role of the informal recycling sector in a prospective international agreement on plastic pollution’ and this working paper. This work was supported by the project ASAP—Asian Scientific Alliance for Plastic Pollution and Value Network Management (Contract no. 302575, Research Council of Norway). The webinar was co-hosted by the ‘The India-Norway cooperation project on capacity building for reducing plastic and chemical pollution in India’ (INOPOL).

Presenters: Erlend Draget, Costas Velis, Siddharth Hande, Kabir (Qabeer) Arora (Jalandhari), Marianne Bailey

Related Publications

1
Fair and inclusive Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) in the Global South

As the international community is moving towards a legally binding instrument to end plastic pollution, understanding how EPR can be designed and implemented to reduce plastic pollution, increase plastic recovery rates, and improve working conditions and livelihoods in the informal recycling sector (IRS) is pertinent. To bridge this knowledge gap, this policy brief draws on[…]

2
Important but ignored? The role of the informal recycling sector in a prospective international agreement on plastic pollution

In science and policy discussions around a possible future international agreement on plastic pollution at the United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA-5.2), it is important that the role of the informal recycling sector in contributing to plastic waste management is duly recognized. Towards this end, the first IKHAPP Policy Brief formulates seven recommendations ahead of the[…]

3
Leaving no one behind: How a global instrument to end plastic pollution can enable a just transition for the people informally collecting and recovering waste

This report by the United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-Habitat), the Norwegian Institute for Water Research (NIVA) and supported by IKHAPP, highlights the role of the more than 15 million people informally collecting and recovering solid waste globally to end plastic pollution. The report identifies that a just transition of the informal waste and recovery[…]