Plastic pollution will more than double by 2040 unless the world cuts its reliance on plastics like packaging and textiles, according to new research by The Pew Charitable Trusts.
Over the next 15 years, the world will fill the equivalent of about a garbage truck a second with waste plastics, spewing out pollution and creating 280 million metric tonnes of new rubbish each year by 2040, said Pew, an international NGO.
Yet countries cannot agree on how to fix the problem.
They met in Geneva in August in search of a breakthrough after missing a 2024 deadline for a United Nations treaty on plastics, but again failed to reach a consensus.
Despite more than 100 countries supporting a proposal to reduce plastic production at previous talks, diplomats say petro-chemical producing countries are stalling ambitions.
What environmental impacts are caused by plastic, and how can countries address the issue?
Why is plastic a problem?
Plastics cause widespread pollution on land and at sea, harming human health and damaging vulnerable marine habitats, such as coral reefs and mangroves.
Human health impacts connected to plastic pollution - from heart problems to infectious diseases - cost the world US$1.5 trillion a year in economic losses, according to research by the Lancet journal.
The production of plastic also exacerbates climate change, as it is made from fossil fuels such as oil and gas.
Through their life cycle, plastics emit 3.4 per cent of global planet-heating emissions, according to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), a share that is only set to increase as plastic production surges.
How much plastic waste is recycled?
Around the world, only 9 per cent of plastic waste is recycled, according to the OECD, which predicts that global plastic waste is on track to almost triple to 1.2 billion tonnes in 2060 from 460 million tonnes in 2019.