Press Release: Despite methane pledges, governments submit weak plans for waste sector emissions
Despite methane pledges, governments submit weak plans for waste sector emissions
Gaia Press Release: 24 October 2025 – Governments are overlooking simple, effective tools to curb methane emissions from waste, analysis of the latest round of national climate plans (NDCs) shows.
GAIA examined 14 NDCs submitted
to the UN climate body from countries chosen for their ambition and strong
potential to curb emissions with zero waste strategies. All had signed up to
the Global
Methane Pledge and the
Declaration
on Reducing Methane from Organic Waste.
While there were some good
elements in four of the plans, ten were weak or harmful. No country fully
captured the potential emissions savings and social benefits of an effective
zero waste strategy.
Key findings:
- Brazil
showed significant progress from its previous NDC, with solid policy
framing and concrete measures to manage organic waste.
- Bangladesh,
Chile, Colombia and Nigeria placed increased emphasis on a just
transition, including references to job retraining, skills development and
addressing the challenges faced by informal workers.
- However,
the majority of plans failed to integrate waste pickers, who have a
critical role to play in implementing zero waste strategies.
- Nepal,
Uruguay, Colombia, Morocco, and Bangladesh planned to establish or expand
waste-to-energy infrastructure, also known as incineration, which emits
carbon dioxide, undermines recycling efforts and displaces jobs.
“It is good to see increased attention on waste sector mitigation potential in national climate plans,” says Doun Moon, policy and research officer at GAIA. “However, too many plans focus on waste disposal rather than prevention or material recovery, often favoring private profits over people. Our research shows that community-led zero waste initiatives are one of the fastest, cheapest ways to cut methane emissions.”
Waste accounts for 20% of human-caused emissions of methane, a potent greenhouse gas. Best practice in waste management, including source separation, composting, bio-stabilization, and bio-cover for dumpsites, can cut these emissions by 95% and provide good jobs.
More broadly, 70% of greenhouse gas emissions come from the material economy. A zero waste strategy that follows the reduce, reuse, recycle hierarchy can cut emissions at every stage of the value chain.
The national climate plans analysed were from Bangladesh, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Ethiopia, Kenya, Morocco, Nepal, Nigeria, Panama, Uruguay, Zambia and Zimbabwe. The focus is on countries in the Global South, which can leapfrog false solutions like incineration and go straight to zero waste models, with the right finance. Other countries with a similar profile have yet to submit NDCs. See GAIA’s interactive map for the latest country-level analysis of waste management in NDCs.
“We urge governments to embrace
zero waste as a climate solution, with waste pickers and communities at its
heart,” says Mariel Vilela, director of the global climate program at GAIA.
“The upcoming COP30 climate conference is a moment to share success stories and
get money flowing to the people making things happen on the ground.”
GAIA has published detailed
policy recommendations for Chile, Indonesia and South
Africa to put
zero waste into action.
Contacts
Doun Moon, policy and research
officer, GAIA: doun@no-burn.org
Sonia Astudillo, global climate
communications officer, GAIA: sonia@no-burn.org
Resources
- GAIA NDC Tracker
- Global Methane Pledge
- Declaration on Reducing Methane from Organic Waste
- Zero Waste to Zero Emissions: How Reducing Waste is
a Climate Gamechanger (GAIA research)
- Methane Matters: A Comprehensive Approach to Methane Mitigation (GAIA research)
About GAIA:
GAIA is a network of grassroots
groups as well as national and regional alliances representing more than 1,000
organizations from over 100 countries. With our work we aim to catalyze a
global shift towards environmental justice by strengthening grassroots social
movements that advance solutions to waste and pollution. We envision a just,
Zero Waste world built on respect for ecological limits and community rights,
where people are free from the burden of toxic pollution, and resources are
sustainably conserved, not burned or dumped. www.no-burn.org

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