February 8, 2019

Ottawa, Ontario - Plastic pollution is harming our oceans, lakes and rivers. With more than eight million metric tonnes of plastic ending up in the oceans each year, it is important for all of us – governments, organizations, communities and every individual to take action.

The Government of Canada is committed to finding real solutions. That is why it was a focal point during Canada’s G7 Presidency last year which resulted in the development of an international Ocean Plastics Charter and Canada signing onto the Global Ghost Gear Initiative.



Domestically, the Government of Canada is taking practical steps, consistent with the waste management elements of the Greening Government Strategy, to better manage the use and disposal of plastics in its own operations. The government’s steps to reduce plastic waste include new commitments to:



set explicit targets for diverting plastic waste;

eliminate the unnecessary use of single-use plastics in government operations; and

leverage procurement practices to focus on sustainable plastic products.

Building on this leadership, the Honourable Jonathan Wilkinson, Minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard, announced at an employee town hall today, a new policy to curb the purchase and use of single-use plastics. Fisheries and Oceans Canada and the Canadian Coast Guard have established a new policy to reduce the purchase and use of single-use plastics and issued an associated directive to restrict their purchase and use for federal government meetings, events and conferences.



Fisheries and Oceans Canada including the Canadian Coast Guard is the first federal department to implement this type of internal policy in support of the Government of Canada’s Greening Government Strategy and Actions on Plastic Waste in Federal Operations, which commit the government to divert at least 75% of all non-hazardous operational waste, including plastic, by 2030.



More than 2,400 Fisheries and Oceans and Coast Guard employees pledged to reduce their consumption of single-use plastics in both their personal and professional lives as part of a departmentally-led Goodbye Plastic initiative.

