Plastic pollution has particularly severe impacts on fisheries, agriculture and tourism, which directly depend on healthy natural systems. These sectors demonstrate that biodiversity loss and plastic pollution are not just environmental challenges, but economic and resilience challenges too. More than half of global GDP is moderately or highly dependent on nature. So degraded ecosystems create growing risks for communities, industries and economies at a time when they are already under pressure from climate change and geopolitical uncertainty.
This report draws on field assessments conducted across nine geographies on three continents – developed by the World Economic Forum’s Global Plastic Action Partnership (GPAP) – which represent one of the most detailed multi-country evidence bases on plastic pollution and biodiversity to date. It concludes with recommendations for governments, corporates, investors and communities to translate this evidence into coordinated efforts to deliver measurable benefits for nature, people and economies.
















