Road to G20: Beating Plastic Pollution from Source to Sea

public
Thu, Nov 3 2022
Asia/Jakarta: 8:00am - 3:00pm
Fri, Nov 4 2022, Asia/Jakarta: 8am - 3pm
ONLINE EVENT
Denpasar, Indonesia

Poster

The Government of Indonesia has set a strong commitment to tackle marine plastics in the country. First, our government targets to reduce 70% of ocean plastic waste by 2025 by enacting Presidential Decree Number 83/2018 on Marine Debris Management. Moreover, the Ministry of Environment and Forestry (MoEF) issued ministerial regulation Number 75/2019 to involve the private sector in taking action for waste reduction, including plastics.

Given all the commitments, policies, initiatives, and activities, Indonesia has launched its progress in reducing plastic waste by 28,5% in 2018-2021. Looking at our government’s target, accelerating efforts to achieve the national goal by 2025 is needed. The responsibility to tackle the plastic waste issue should not only be aimed at the government or private sector. All stakeholders need to be involved in creating collaborative actions.

Recognizing the urgent need to take bold collaborative action on plastic pollution. Indonesia National Plastic Action Partnership was launched in 2019 under the leadership of Luhut B. Pandjaitan, Coordinating Minister for Maritime Affairs and Investment. NPAP convenes all stakeholders to work towards one common goal –reducing marine plastic leakage.

The Indonesia NPAP has since flourished and grown into a locally-led multi stakeholder platform that brings together the nation’s leading policymakers, experts, business leaders, entrepreneurs, and civil society organizations, all working towards one common goal –reducing marine plastic leakage by 70% by 2025. In 2020, NPAP developed the Multistakeholder Action Plan – Indonesia’s first comprehensive, cost analysis of solutions to address plastic pollution through systems change approach. The action plan was informed and supported through buy-in from a broad cross-section of business, government and civil society. It is currently being implemented by five locally driven task forces in the areas of financing, innovation, policy, behavioral change, and metrics, working collaboratively as well as in parallel to put the proposed solutions in the action plan into motion.

Under Indonesia’s leadership, the upcoming G20 Summit can become a momentum to meaningfully engage government, business and communities in strengthening commitments and mobilizing more investment to achieve the national target. The outcomes from this event will also inform the upcoming discussions in the first session of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee in Paraguay on November 28 - December 2, 2022. This event will be co-hosted by the Coordinating Ministry of Maritime Affairs and Investment and Indonesia NPAP.

Join us by registering yourself or via Youtube: Kemenko Bidang Kemaritiman dan Investasi RI

Be sure to use our virtually background which you can download here:
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1czK2n7wA2lv4hAm3yiDvb0LlI0yS082g?usp=share_link

Looking forward to seeing you all!

 

Agenda

Day 1

Time

Agenda

08:00 - 08:05

Opening

08:05–08:10

Sing Indonesia Raya

08:10 - 08:15

Welcoming Speech from Coordinating Minister for Maritime Affairs and Investment

08:15 - 08:20

Keynote speech

  • Coordinating Minister for Maritime Affairs and Investment
  • Topic: Indonesia’s progress towards the marine plastic reduction target by 2025, commitment in the context of the G20 presidency and multi-stakeholder partnership

08.20 - 08.30

Keynote speech

  • NPAP Chairwoman
  • Topic: Update on multi stakeholder collaboration and collective efforts to combat plastic pollution

08.30 - 08.45

Stakeholders’ pledge to fight marine debris

08:45 - 09:05

What gets measured gets managed: Understanding the source of marine plastic and identifying relevant policy measures

  • Speaker: Andre Aquino, Program Leader for Sustainable Development, World Bank.
  • Topic: Understanding the source of marine plastic – sharing key findings on marine plastic studies (from land-based and sea-based sources) and policy recommendations to reduce marine plastic pollution

09:05 - 11:35

Session 1: Enabling policy for the acceleration of circular economy

Co-chairs: CMMAI and the World Bank

Session Host: World Bank and Danone

  • Ministry of Environment and Forestry (MoEF). Topic: Reducing plastic intake through strengthening the MOEF Regulation No 75/2019 on Roadmap of Waste Reduction by Producers
  • Ministry of Marine Affairs and Fisheries (MMAF). Topic: Mitigating sea-based plastic source from ALDFG and EOLFG
  • Ministry of Industry. Topic: Ministry of Industry Support on Plastic Waste Reduction and Circular Business Model
  • The World Bank. Topic: Identifying priority policy recommendations for the national and local government to accelerate marine plastic reduction.
  • West Java. Topic: Role and efforts of local government in addressing solid waste management, and what is needed by the local government to address marine plastic issue
  • Danone-AQUA Indonesia. Topic: The role of private sector in increasing the collection and recycling of plastic waste as an implementation of the producer’s responsibility

11:35 - 12:35

Lunch break

12:35 - 14:05

Session 2: Unlocking the financing gap to meet Indonesia’s marine plastic reduction target

Co-chairs by: BKF and ADB

Session Host: ADB & Delterra

  • Asia Development Bank (ADB)
  • Fiscal Policy Agency
  • PT Sarana Multi Infrastruktur
  • Minderoo
  • Alliance to End Plastic Waste
  • KADIN - Shinta Kamdani

14:05 - 15:00

Summary and Next Steps by CMMAI

Closing

Day 2

Time

Agenda

08:00 - 08:10

Opening by Host

08:10 - 09:40

Session 3: The measurement of Indonesia’s progress to reduce plastic waste from source to sea

Co-chairs by: BRIN/CSIRO

Session Host: TKN-PSL & Minderoo Foundation

  • Monash University. Topic: What is needed to improve Citarum River from water pollution and its technical challenges
  • BRIN. Topic: Methodology of Marine Debris Reduction Calculation in Indonesia 
  • University of Georgia. Topic: Understanding plastic waste inputs from land into the ocean: Context of the model, Assumption, Limitations and its Projection

09:40 - 11:00

Session 4: INNOVATION: INSIGHTS, OPPORTUNITIES & BARRIERS

Co-chairs by: BRIN & SecondMuse

Hosted by: SecondMuse and Alliance to End Plastic Waste

  • SecondMuse
  • Alliance To End Plastic Waste

11:00 - 12:00

Lunch break

12:00 - 13:30

Session 5: Enabling Change for Good: Reducing Plastic Waste through Behavioral Change and Nudges that Work

Co-chairs: AZWI/Kemendikbud/NU

Co-host: Unilever & Indonesian-German Development Cooperation

  • Unilever
  • The Ambassador of the Federal Republic of Germany
  • GIDKP/AZWI and Enviu
  • DUITIN
  • Bank Sampah Gema Pelita
  • PAUD
  • LPBI NU
  • Indonesian-German Development Cooperation
  • OASE
  • LPEM UI

13:30 - 15:00

Pitching @ main room

Matchmaking, booth