Oman Daily Observer

EU targets fast fashion in push for durable goods

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on Monday backed plans to crack down on fast fashion with a ban on destroying unsold clothes, as it targets more goods with tougher sustainabi­lity rules.

EU competitio­n ministers met in Brussels to approve a plan proposed last year by the European Commission, the bloc’s executive arm, to ban the destructio­n of textiles, shoes and other unsold consumer products.

The bloc wants to reduce the environmen­tal impact of clothes or accessorie­s that are made but never used, especially since the proliferat­ion of online shopping.

According to the EU, textiles have the fourth highest impact on the environmen­t and climate change across its 27 nations after food, housing and transport.

There will be a four-year exemption from the ban for mediumsize­d companies, while small firms will have a general exemption.

The rules will include tighter requiremen­ts for products to be “more durable, reliable, reusable, upgradable, reparable, recyclable and easier to maintain”, the member states said in a statement.

Many other consumer goods will be affected, but there will be exemptions for food, feed, medicine and veterinary products. Cars were also exempted since other laws address their impact on the environmen­t.

Goods must be sold with a “digital product passport”, which could be a QR code, it added.

The rules will only come into force after negotiatio­ns between the member states and the European Parliament, which is due to formally back the proposals in the coming weeks.

The European Environmen­t Agency (EEA) says the number of used textiles exported from the EU tripled over the last two decades from more than 550,000 tonnes in 2000 to almost 1.7 million tonnes in 2019.

But the EEA said the fate of used textiles exported from the EU is “highly uncertain”. — AFP

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