I'll start with where it should be going. All of the environmentalists involved in that treaty process as observers, and some of the member states as well, are very clear that we need a global, legally binding treaty with measures that limit the production of plastics worldwide and limit trade in plastics in favour of other types of trade practices that are supportive of healthy economies. That would include bans on the most problematic products, which Canada has started with, and on the most problematic chemical additives in plastics, and a scientific committee that can help lead us through the development of measures over time as we get more information and as our economy hopefully shifts away from the linear, throwaway society that we have today.
What we have right now is a bit of a roadblock with a small group of countries that seem highly connected to industry, whether it be their own national industries or private industry, led largely by multinationals out of the United States, which are also present in Canada, that are trying to block efforts for international co-operation on plastics. To get over that hump, we need to think about what we've done before in Canada, which was host a Montreal protocol. That managed to phase out ozone-depleting substances. It didn't start with all the countries signing on. It started with the committed countries signing on and it built over time. The other countries saw the wisdom in it, and we managed to phase out those chemicals.
We need to do the same for plastics—keep our eye on the prize, sign a treaty with the countries that are most committed to it and work with science and indigenous leaders to figure out a way through that is fair to everyone, that follows evidence and that gets international co-operation to ensure that our planet will be healthy for generations to come.