Turkey dumping UK plastic waste: Report

A Tesco wrapper found among plastic waste dumped and burned in Adana province, Turkey. (Greenpeace)
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Updated 17 May 2021
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Turkey dumping UK plastic waste: Report

  • Greenpeace: Turkey is Europe’s ‘largest plastic waste dump’
  • Waste being dumped instead of recycled

LONDON: About 40 percent of the UK’s plastic waste exports were sent to Turkey last year, Greenpeace has revealed.

Investigators from the environmental activist group found that instead of being recycled, some of the 210,000 tons of waste was dumped by roads, in fields and in waterways.

Greenpeace urged the British government to “take control” of the situation, and described Turkey as Europe’s “largest plastic waste dump.”

The group said it had found plastic waste from UK supermarkets at all of the 10 sites it visited across southern Turkey.


California joins UN health network following US departure from WHO

A view shows The World Health Organization (WHO) headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, January 28, 2025. (REUTERS)
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California joins UN health network following US departure from WHO

  • California Governor Gavin ‍Newsom decried the ‍United States’ move on Friday, calling it ‍a “reckless decision” that will hurt many people

CALIFORNIA: California said on Friday it will become the first US state to join the World Health Organization’s ​global outbreak response network following the Trump administration’s decision to pull Washington out of the WHO.
The network, comprised of more than 360 technical institutions, responds to public health events with the deployment of staff and resources to affected countries. It ‌has tackled ‌major public health events, ‌including ⁠COVID-19. The ​state’s ‌decision to join the network comes more than a year after US President Donald Trump gave notice that Washington would depart from the WHO. On Thursday, it officially withdrew from the agency, saying its decision ⁠reflected failures in the UN health agency’s management of ‌the pandemic.
California Governor Gavin ‍Newsom decried the ‍United States’ move on Friday, calling it ‍a “reckless decision” that will hurt many people.
“California will not bear witness to the chaos this decision will bring,” Newsom said in a statement. “We ​will continue to foster partnerships across the globe and remain at the ⁠forefront of public health preparedness, including through our membership as the only state in WHO’s Global Outbreak Alert & Response Network.”
The governor’s office said he met with the WHO’s Director General, Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, this week, where they discussed collaborating to detect and respond to emerging public health threats.
The ‌WHO did not immediately respond when reached for comment.