
A Global Call to End Plastic Pollution
On June 5, the world comes together to celebrate World Environment Day 2025, an annual event that raises awareness about pressing environmental issues. This year, under the leadership of the Republic of Korea, the spotlight is on one of the most pervasive and urgent threats to our planet: plastic pollution.
Every year, 19 to 23 million tonnes of plastic waste seep into rivers, lakes, and oceans—equivalent to 2,000 garbage trucks worth of plastic dumped daily into our aquatic ecosystems. This mounting crisis affects marine life, disrupts livelihoods, and threatens food security across continents.
Plastic Pollution: A Crisis That Touches Everything
Plastic waste doesn’t just litter landscapes—it alters entire ecosystems. It disrupts natural processes, weakens the resilience of environments to climate change, and endangers biodiversity. For millions, especially in vulnerable communities, this means fewer fish to catch, contaminated drinking water, and diminished incomes.
According to the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), plastic pollution is interconnected with other global challenges like climate change, resource depletion, and ecosystem degradation. Addressing plastic waste is not only an environmental necessity but also crucial for achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)—particularly those related to responsible consumption, life below water, and climate action.
Why World Environment Day Matters
Since its inception in 1973 following the 1972 UN Conference on the Human Environment, World Environment Day has grown into the largest global platform for environmental outreach. With activities ranging from clean-up drives and climate campaigns to educational workshops, it urges individuals and governments alike to take meaningful steps toward a healthier, more sustainable future.
Let This Be the Turning Point
World Environment Day 2025 is more than a commemoration—it’s a call to act. Whether it’s refusing single-use plastics, supporting clean-up efforts, or pushing for policy changes, everyone has a role to play. Ending plastic pollution is not just about saving nature—it’s about safeguarding our shared future.