What essentially I'm telling you is that the Basel Convention is the highest international legal standard—also the international minimum legal standard—when it comes to transboundary movement of hazardous waste and certain other waste.
Plastic waste has newly been introduced into that framework as another waste that needs to be controlled under the procedure of prior informed consent. This doesn't mean that the global plastic waste trade has been banned. In fact, there are no bans in place. It is simply a procedure for transparency to make sure that an accountability chain has been set up, so I believe that Canada needs to ramp up its pace in implementing the Basel Convention obligations.
This is a very purposeful ratification that Canada did. Initially, in the month of March, Canada indicated that it would not accept the plastic waste amendments. In that case, the agreement that it had made with the U.S. would have been fine, because it wouldn't have had to control annex II Y48 wastes under the prior informed consent controls. However, in December Canada retracted its non-acceptance and officially accepted and ratified those amendments.
The EU has already put these amendments into domestic legislation. Any trade between the EU and Canada of dirty mixed plastics has to go through the PIC controls, the prior informed consent controls, and has to basically go through notification and consent.
We would like to see Canada meet the international minimum standard for exporting plastic wastes and meet its obligations.