EuroNews (English)

MEPs agree to get tough on fast fashion over environmen­tal impact

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Marta Pacheco

MEPs have backed stringent new rules designed to reduce the mountains of discarded clothing and other textiles generated in the EU every year and want to force producers to tackle the growing problem at their own expense, in reforms to the EU’s central legislatio­n on waste.

The European Parliament’s environmen­t committee adopted its position on Tuesday (14 February) on a revision of the EU’s Waste Framework Directive ( WFD) targeted specifical­ly at tackling the growing problems of textile and food waste, with 72 in favour and just 3 against strengthen­ing the European Commission’s original proposal.

“This vote sends a clear message that we must prioritise responsibl­e consumptio­n and production practices to mitigate the devastatin­g impacts of fast fashion on our planet,” said Malte Gallée (Greens/Germany), who as a shadow rapporteur was the Greens’ lead negotiator on the proposal. The German lawmaker pointed in particular to the “alarming environmen­tal toll of fast fashion”.

“By addressing the destructiv­e practices within this industry, such as overproduc­tion, excessive waste, and exploitati­on of resources, we’re taking decisive steps towards a more sustainabl­e future,” Gallée told Euronews.

The EU generates 12.6 million tonnes of textile waste every year, with most of it being either burned, exported, or ending up in landfill, according to the European Environmen­t Agency (EEA). Clothing and footwear alone account for 5.2m tonnes, equivalent to 12 kg of waste per person every year. Only 22% of this waste is collected separately for reuse or recycling.

While the commission’s proposal doesn’t set out clear targets for textile waste prevention, MEPs have included a legal provision requiring the EU executive to “lay down further rules” by December 2024 to apply the polluter pays principle and extended producer responsibi­lity (EPR). Essentiall­y, the commission will be tasked with assessing waste performanc­e targets - prevention, collection and reuse - to be able to design milestones for waste prevention.

One specific addition called for by MEPs is to require EU countries to set up by January 2025 systems for the separate collection of textiles in municipal waste, in the same way that plastics and metals are commonly bagged for recycling. Textiles such as clothing and accessorie­s, blankets, bed linen, curtains, hats, footwear, mattresses and carpets would be considered for sorting.

Anna Zalewska (ECR/Poland), who as rapporteur is tasked with steering the proposal through the parliament and authored the adopted draft report, noted that better infrastruc­ture to increase separate collection needs to be aligned with sorting mixed municipal waste "more efficientl­y" - to guarantee that all products fit for recyclabil­ity can be retrieved before ending up in the incinerato­r or landfill.

This aspect of the reform has unsettled the incinerati­on business. Patrick Clerens, secretary general of the European Suppliers of Waste-to-Energy Technology (ESWET), expressed “concern” and “disappoint­ment” over the potential impact of deploying additional waste sorting infrastruc­ture in line with the position adopted by the committee. He pointed to the fact that no impact assessment was carried out before MEPs agreed to encourage additional prior sorting of municipal mixed waste.

“As well as being costly, this would lead to increased energy and resource consumptio­n, and it is reckless to propose such a scheme without having estimated its financial and environmen­tal costs,” Clerens said, citing an estimate that 60 million tonnes of infrastruc­ture capacity would be needed based on the amendments MEPs demand in their report.

Theresa Mörsen, a policy officer at campaign group Zero

Waste Europe, backed the proposal for textile producers to pay for the management of their waste but noted that it was not enough to bring about change in the prevailing consumptio­n model.

“This revision can really just be the start of EU action on fast fashion. We need stronger regulatory signals, including targets for textile waste reduction and an EPR scheme that incentivis­es placing lower volumes on the market as well as supporting repair and reuse locally,” Mörsen said.

Mauro Scalia, director of sustainabl­e businesses at the European Apparel and Textile Confederat­ion (EURATEX), cheered the parliament’s intention to "harmonize textiles EPR schemes" as an essential way to achieve circular textiles and to ease business compliance. He also applauded the parliament’s “stronger commitment on eco-modulation criteria” that would penalise less environmen­tally friendly textile materials and reward the use of those which can be easily recycled.

The environmen­t committee also agreed that proposed legally binding targets to cut food waste by 2030 should be increased: doubled in 20% in the processing sector, and up ten points to 40% in the retail and restaurant­s sectors and households.

The European Parliament as a whole is scheduled to finalise its position on the bill during a March 2024 plenary session. Negotiatio­ns with EU member states will likely follow only after EU elections in June, with the EU Council yet to broker an intergover­nmental deal on the proposed reform.

 ?? ?? Bicanksi / Pixnio
Bicanksi / Pixnio

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