Otago Daily Times

EU bans list of plastics, polystyren­e containers

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STRASBOURG: European Union lawmakers moved this week to ban widely used, throwaway plastics such as straws and cotton buds, and put a greater burden on manufactur­ers to recycle in an effort to clear up ocean pollution.

Under the proposal, overwhelmi­ngly backed by the European Parliament, 10 singleuse plastic products with readily available alternativ­es would be banned by 2021. EU states would be obliged to recycle 90% of plastic bottles by 2025 and producers to help cover costs of waste management.

‘‘We are sending a strong signal to industry,’’ EU lawmaker Frederique Ries, a Belgian liberal, said.

‘‘There is broad and growing popular support on this issue,’’ said Ries, who is representi­ng the parliament in negotiatio­ns with EU government­s.

The EU recycles only a quarter of the 25 million tonnes of plastics waste it produces per year.

China’s decision to stop processing waste coupled with growing alarm over damage to oceans has pushed the continent to end reliance on developing countries to deal with its waste. Regulators hope the new rules will lead to a drop in the price of recycled plastics.

The EU’s final rules still need to be approved in talks with member states — some of which have balked at the curbs, worried they will be too difficult to implement for industry.

But the deputy head of the EU executive, who is overseeing efforts to cut down on plastic waste, called for action.

‘‘Europe has to come to terms with the fact that we cannot just put it on someone else’s shoulders,’’ EU Commission first vicepresid­ent Frans Timmermans said, saying he was encouraged by a shift in the private sector towards more voluntary recycling and public activism on the issue.

‘‘It is the first strategy in the world that looks at the whole issue of the role of plastics in our economy,’’ he said.

‘‘If we don’t move now, if we don’t move swiftly . . . you will have more plastic in the oceans than fish.’’

EU lawmakers added polystyren­e fastfood containers and products made of oxodegrada­ble plastics, which critics say do not fully break down, to the list proposed by the EU executive earlier this year.

Waste from cigarette butts, which can take over a decade to degrade in water, would also have to be cut by 50% in 2025 and by 80% in 2030. EU countries would also have to collect fishing gear polluting beaches. — Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: TNS ?? The last straws . . . Plastic straws are among several items to be banned by the EU in an effort to reduce ocean pollution.
PHOTO: TNS The last straws . . . Plastic straws are among several items to be banned by the EU in an effort to reduce ocean pollution.

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