A study published today (19 January) in the journal Global Environmental Change reveals a new policy tool, ‘Plastic Drawdown’, could lead to significant reductions in plastic waste in the Maldives.

Co-authored by experts at the University of Oxford, Imperial College London, Eunomia, Nekton, The Government of the Maldives, and Common Seas, the study found that five policy solutions could prevent as much as 85 per cent of plastic pollution by 2030. Without action, the study revealed, plastic pollution would rise by 45 per cent.
Created by social enterprise Common Seas, the ‘Plastic Drawdown’ tool has been designed for countries with limited data, used in partnership with practitioners in the Maldives to explore solutions to minimise plastic waste, with the Government later introducing a phase-out strategy for single-use plastics.
Common Seas is now seeking new partnerships to scale this work to new geographies in 2022 and beyond.
A spokesman for the President of the Maldives said: “Plastic Drawdown was critical in building the case for phasing out single-use plastics across the Maldives.