Business World

EU provisiona­lly OK’s law to cut packaging waste

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BRUSSELS — The European Union (EU) has reached a provisiona­l deal on a new law to cut packaging waste and ban singleuse plastics, such as supermarke­t bags for fruit and mini hotel shampoo bottles in hotels, albeit with exemptions for certain sectors.

The European Commission proposed a revamp in 2022 of rules governing packaging waste, which in the EU has jumped by more than 20% in the last decade, driven by online shopping and “grab and go” consumptio­n habits.

Each European generates almost 190 kg (419 pounds) of packaging waste per year.

Negotiator­s from the European Parliament and Belgium, which holds the six-month rotating EU presidency, agreed late on Monday on packaging reduction targets of 5% by 2030 and 15% by 2040 and that all packaging should be recyclable by 2030.

By then, a ban will apply to single-use plastic items such as disposable plates, cups and boxes used by fast food restaurant­s, shrink-wrap for suitcases at airports and lightweigh­t bags, such as offered in markets for groceries.

There will also be a ban on “forever chemicals” (per- and polyfluori­nated alkyl substances or PFASs) in food contact packaging.

The EU will also apply re-use targets, such as 10% for take-away packaging and for drinks containers, except those for wine or milk.

Cardboard will also be exempt, as countries such as Finland had sought.

Negotiator­s agreed that empty space should make up no more than 50% of packaged goods, putting an end to oversized boxes for online deliveries.

The targets as a whole will not apply to very small businesses.

The agreement still needs approval from the European Parliament and EU government­s, which is not a given in the lead-up to EU elections in June. —

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