The Asian Age

UK, EU spar over who will be greenest after Brexit

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London, Feb. 23: Top officials from Britain and the EU traded Twitter barbs Friday over who would do most for the environmen­t after Brexit, in a spat over proposals to ban plastic straws.

British Environmen­t Secretary Michael Gove, a leading euroscepti­c, suggested leaving the EU would make it easier for his country to take action to cut plastic pollution.

He told Sky News there were “a number of things, from banning plastic straws to ending the live export of animals for slaughter, where being outside the EU actually makes it easier for us to do the right thing”.

European Commission First Vice President Frans Timmermans responded on Twitter: “One step ahead of you. EU legislatio­n on single- use plastics coming before the summer.

“Maybe you can align with us? # EUDoesntSu­ck # S t r o n g e r To g e t h e r # PlasticsSt­rategy.”

A few hours later, Gove hit back, noting “there has London, Feb. 23: Prime Minister Theresa May will make a speech next Friday on Britain’s relationsh­ip with the EU following Brexit after her Cabinet agreed a plan at a marathon meeting, her spokesman said.

One minister who was not present said they had agreed Britain would seek to align itself with European Union rules in certain sectors of the economy, but will retain the right to diverge.

been no specific proposal -as yet -- from the EU to ban straws”.

“Also waiting for the EU to catch up on microbeads - - UK’s ban is 1st in Europe # greenbrexi­t,” he tweeted.

The European Commission announced plans in January to increase plastic recycling and phase out single- use plastic, but it has yet to publish

May is under pressure to set out more details of her position before talks get underway on the future partnershi­p in April, with Brussels warning Britain cannot have everything it wants.

The Prime Minister gathered around a dozen of her senior Cabinet colleagues for eight hours of talks at her country retreat Chequers on Thursday, in a bid to thrash out their considerab­le difference­s. legislatio­n.

Gove told the Daily Telegraph newspaper to “watch this space” on a ban in Britain, although his ministry could not give any details about the proposals.

Britain’s department for environmen­t, food and rural affairs noted the government’s committmen­t to eliminatin­g avoidable plastic by 2042.

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