Saint Lucia initiates national source inventory exercise to end plastic pollution 

To inform targeted planning, the Government of Saint Lucia has initiated a national source inventory exercise in order to strategically tackle plastic pollution and marine litter.

Saint Lucia initiates national source inventory exercise to end plastic pollution 
Saint Lucia initiates national source inventory exercise to end plastic pollution 

Castries, Saint Lucia: To inform targeted planning, the Government of Saint Lucia has initiated a national source inventory exercise in order to strategically tackle plastic pollution and marine litter. Saint Lucia and most other countries are confronted with concerning levels of plastic pollution threatening marine ecosystems and economies. 

Citing the latest global assessment of marine litter and plastic pollution titled Pollution to Solution (2019), the UN Environment Programme highlighted that plastic accounts for 85% of marine litter and warned that the volumes of plastic pollution flowing into marine areas would nearly triple by 2024. It further added that 23-37 million metric tons of plastic waste into the ocean per year. 

In order to end plastic pollution and forge an international, legally binding agreement by 2024, the government of Saint Lucia and other members of the UN Environment Assembly agreed on the resolution this year. 

The Saint Lucian Government remains faithful in its commitments to address marine litter and waste management generally, progressing with a High-Level Meeting to develop a National Source Inventory on Plastic Pollution and Marine Litter and a Marine Litter Management Action Plan (ML-MAP) to be held at the Finance Administrative Centre on Thursday, 21st July 2022.

 This event follows a Technical Consultation Workshop held earlier this year in April. The development of a national source inventory will enable officials to identify the most important sources of marine litter entering the environment, waterways, and coastal seas. 

The national inventory is expected to encompass statistics and databases on (plastic and other) product life cycles and flows, waste sources and streams, and data gathered through monitoring of freshwater and wastewater, coastal and marine environments. 

By bringing different data sources together, Saint Lucia’s selected approach will provide the basis for strategic action. In turn, a management action plan for marine litter management is under development to help build capacity and raise funding, map progress and identify existing frameworks and gaps, track compliance with guidelines, and be the foundation for inter-agency coordination.

Saint Lucia’s collaborative approach in the pursuit of a National Source Inventory on Plastic Pollution and Marine Litter and an ML-MAP is supported by the United Nations Environment Programme.