Plastic pollution has become an urgent global issue (OECD 2022). Policymakers, business leaders, and communities are advancing solutions to address the problem, but a significant financing gap remains for a circular plastics economy. This report explores the viability of plastic crediting as a potential mechanism to finance plastic pollution interventions.
Authors
- Citation
- “ World Bank . 2024 . Unlocking Financing to Combat the Plastics Crisis - Opportunities, Risks, and Recommendations for Plastic Credits . © Washington, DC: World Bank . http://hdl.handle.net/10986/41866 License: CC BY-NC 3.0 IGO . ”
- Collection(s)
- Other Financial Sector Study
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.1596/41866
- Identifier externaldocumentum
- 34348195
- Identifier internaldocumentum
- 34348195
- Pages
- 108
- Published in
- United States of America
- Report
- 191757
- Rights
- CC BY-NC 3.0 IGO
- Rights Holder
- World Bank
- Rights URI
- https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/igo
- UNIT
- EAP ENR PM 2 (SEAE2)
- URI
- https://hdl.handle.net/10986/41866
- date disclosure
- 2024-07-15
- region geographical
- East Asia
Files
Table of Contents
- Acronyms and abbreviations 8
- Foreward 10
- Acknowledgments 11
- Executive summary 13
- Recommendations 20
- How to read this report 25
- 1. Introduction 27
- 2. How do plastic credits work? 33
- 2.1. Definition of a plastic credit 33
- 2.2 Types of plastic credit 34
- 2.3 How are plastic credits issued and purchased? 35
- 2.4 Key stakeholder groups 36
- 2.5 Plastic Credit Market Governance and Best Practices 37
- Best-practice principles for plastic crediting programs 38
- Best-practice principles for plastic credit purchases 39
- 3. Overview of the plastic credit market 41
- 3.1. State of the current plastic credit market 41
- Existing plastic crediting programs 41
- Geographical distribution of plastic crediting programs 46
- Geographical distribution of plastic credit projects 46
- Types of plastic credits offered by crediting programs 48
- Claims associated with plastic credits 52
- 3.2 Trends in the plastic credit market 53
- Majority of projects in developing countries 53
- Emphasis on the involvement of the informal sector 54
- A dominant voluntary market 54
- Plastic credit prices can vary widely in the absence of a pricing structure 55
- The demand trajectory is uncertain 55
- The role of plastic credits as a mitigation option versus contribution 55
- Plastic crediting is being explored as a regulatory instrument 56
- 3.3 Extended producer responsibility schemes and plastic crediting 56
- The interaction of EPR and plastic crediting 57
- How can plastic crediting be used within EPR schemes? 59
- Case studies – EPR schemes and crediting mechanisms 61
- Case Study 1: A crediting mechanism to increase recycling in the UK 61
- Case Study 2: EPR crediting as a tool for compliance in India 62
- Key considerations for plastic crediting as a regulatory instrument 62
- 3.4 Benefits, risks, and challenges 65
- Benefits of plastic crediting 65
- Key benefits 65
- Risks and challenges of plastic crediting 70
- Challenges and risks 71
- 4. Recommendations 77
- 4.1 General recommendations for plastic crediting 77
- 4.2 Proposed actions 87
- References 91
- Annex I 97
- Key components of a crediting standard 97
- Annex II 99
- Incentivizing private sector investment through the pilot auction facility 99
- Annex III 100
- The Paris Agreement and Article 6 100
- Annex IV 101
- Methodological considerations for upstream plastic credits 101
- Annex V 104
- Landscape of plastic crediting in Southeast Asian countries 104
- Deep dive on plastic crediting in the Philippines 106
- Table 1: Plastic credit projects under category 1 programs by year 17
- Table 4: Plastic crediting program categories 43
- Table 5: Credit types across plastic crediting programs 49
- Table 6: Summary of claims and associated results 52
- Table 7: Developing national crediting standards versus adopting existing standards 59
- Table 8: Examples Sustainable Development Goal attributes from plastic pollution reduction 69
- Table 9: Summary of recommended actions for key stakeholders 89
- Table 10: Examples of upstream plastic project activities 103
- Table 11: Overview of plastic credit projects and EPR in ASEAN nations 105
- Figure 1: Distribution of Registered and Listed Plastic Credit Projects by Programs and Regions 16
- Figure 2: Key stakeholders involved in plastic credit process 37
- Figure 3: Best practices for certification programs to ensure impact 38
- Figure 4: Key principles for plastic credits 39
- Figure 5: Distribution of registered and listed plastic credit projects across programs and regions 47
- Figure 6: Distribution of plastic credit projects with verified or issued credits across programs and regions 48
- Figure 7: Overview of extended producer responsibility schemes with / without a crediting mechanism 57
- Figure 8: Overview of possible interactions between EPR and plastic crediting 58
- Box 1: Financing Waste Collection and Recycling in Thailand through Waste Credits 36
- Box 2: Plastic credits for upstream activities 50
- Box 3: Moving toward standardization for plastic crediting: The relevance of the INC process for plastic crediting 78
- Box 4: Enabling action through a Plastic Waste Reduction-Linked Bond 84