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      • With a population of 250 million, Indonesia is the fourth most populous country and second-largest plastic polluter in the world after China. The country produces 3.2 million tonnes of unmanaged plastic waste a year, of which about 1.29 million tonnes ends up in the sea.
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  2. Chemicals & waste. With a population of 250 million, Indonesia is the fourth most populous country and second-largest plastic polluter in the world after China. The country produces 3.2 million tonnes of unmanaged plastic waste a year, of which about 1.29 million tonnes ends up in the sea.

  3. Indonesia has become a dumping ground for plastic from Australia, Europe and North America. The waste is burned as fuel by local communities, causing respiratory illness and other long-term health problems for people who inhale the polluted smoke. Research shows pollutants have contaminated Indonesia's food chain.

  4. Indonesia plans to eliminate plastic pollution by 2040. Right now an estimated 150 million tonnes of plastic waste is floating in our marine environments. Every year around 11 million additional tonnes make their way into our oceans.

  5. Feb 1, 2023 · Indonesia is the second-largest plastic polluter in the world after China. 3.9 million tonnes of plastic waste are produced yearly and 1.29 million tonnes pollute the ocean.

  6. Indonesia has been actively involved in several global eforts to address plastic pollution. For example, in 2017, Indonesia joined UN Environment’s #CleanSeas campaign to eliminate major sources of marine litter by cutting plastic waste in 25 coastal cities and reducing marine litter by 70% by 2025 (UNEP 2017).

  7. Sep 9, 2020 · Indonesia is the world’s second-largest plastic polluter, behind only China. Plastic waste in the ocean negatively affects the marine ecosystem as sea creatures like whales, turtles and fish mistake floating plastic waste for food, swallowing material they can’t digest.

  8. Jun 1, 2023 · Spearheaded by CMMAI, Indonesia’s Plan of Action on Marine Plastic Debris (2017-2025) targeted a 70 percent reduction in marine plastic debris by 2025, aiming to control plastic pollution at its source.

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