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Run deal. | |
by Andrew MacGregor | |
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Many races have been run at the Paris 2024 Olympics, but what about the race to end single-use plastics? Neither the BBC nor Discovery+ have shown much interest in the event, so coverage arrives courtesy of Greenpeace. The 'athletes' wear suits and ties instead of spandex, and for good reason—they are the politicians and world leaders who must push it to the limit. It's a strong field—the likes of Great Britain, India, Germany, and the United States of America are all present and correct—but lobbyists and Big Oil threaten (a bloke covered in crude, no less) to throw them off course. Billions of people need them to run the perfect race, no matter how sweaty and uncomfortable they get. The finish line, for a lack of a better term, is Busan, South Korea, where the fifth session of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee is due to meet in November. That may not have the same allure as the Olympics, but it could help the world outpace plastic pollution at last.
Product Category: Lobby Groups
Territory: UK
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Greenpeace - 'Race'
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Run deal. |
Many races have been run at the Paris 2024 Olympics, but what about the race to end single-use plastics? Neither the BBC nor Discovery+ have shown much interest in the event, so coverage arrives courtesy of Greenpeace. The 'athletes' wear suits and ties instead of spandex, and for good reason—they are the politicians and world leaders who must push it to the limit. It's a strong field—the likes of Great Britain, India, Germany, and the United States of America are all present and correct—but lobbyists and Big Oil threaten (a bloke covered in crude, no less) to throw them off course. Billions of people need them to run the perfect race, no matter how sweaty and uncomfortable they get. The finish line, for a lack of a better term, is Busan, South Korea, where the fifth session of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee is due to meet in November. That may not have the same allure as the Olympics, but it could help the world outpace plastic pollution at last.
Product Category: Lobby Groups
Territory: UK
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Run deal. |
by Andrew MacGregor |
Many races have been run at the Paris 2024 Olympics, but what about the race to end single-use plastics? Neither the BBC nor Discovery+ have shown much interest in the event, so coverage arrives courtesy of Greenpeace. The 'athletes' wear suits and ties instead of spandex, and for good reason—they are the politicians and world leaders who must push it to the limit. It's a strong field—the likes of Great Britain, India, Germany, and the United States of America are all present and correct—but lobbyists and Big Oil threaten (a bloke covered in crude, no less) to throw them off course. Billions of people need them to run the perfect race, no matter how sweaty and uncomfortable they get. The finish line, for a lack of a better term, is Busan, South Korea, where the fifth session of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee is due to meet in November. That may not have the same allure as the Olympics, but it could help the world outpace plastic pollution at last.
Product Category: Lobby Groups
Territory: UK
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