Daily Mirror

Campaign joy as Lucy’s Law in Parliament

- BY TED HENNESSEY @NadaFarhou­d

CRACKDOWN Puppy farm LUCY’S Law to ban vile puppy farms will today be presented to Parliament.

The legislatio­n, a victory for the Daily Mirror, is expected to come into effect from April next year.

It will outlaw the sale of puppies and kittens by third parties in England.

The aim is that anyone buying or adopting the animals at under six months deals directly with the breeder or rehoming centre, rather than a pet shop or commercial dealer.

We campaigned alongside vet Marc Abraham, who said: “I’m absolutely thrilled Lucy’s Law is now being laid in Parliament.”

It is being named after Lucy, a Cavalier King Charles spaniel, who died in 2016 after being poorly treated on a puppy farm.

The rules, announced by the Government in August, must be debated in both houses to pass into law. LIKE most Brits my life used to be filled with plastic.

I now carry my own shopping bags, refill a water bottle, say “no” to plastic stirrers and straws and have switched to a bamboo toothbrush and face cloth.

I diligently recycle, cut down on meat and use my local refill store when possible with old glass jars.

But despite my best efforts to be greener, ashamedly over the years I’ve unwittingl­y been contributi­ng to an environmen­tal disaster that has a bigger carbon footprint than aviation and shipping combined – fast fashion.

Like most women, and many men, my wardrobe is bursting full of clothes, shoes and handbags.

A few items still have the price tag on. Others probably won’t ever see the light of day again.

In the UK, we buy more clothes per person than any other country in Europe. Italians, famed for being the world’s best dressed, buy half of what we do.

Of the 100 billion items made last year, one in three ended up in landfill or were incinerate­d. No wonder with T-shirts on sale for £2 or dresses for a fiver. But our demand for cheap fashion comes with a catastroph­ic environmen­tal price tag.

It produces an annual carbon footprint of over a billion tonnes of CO2, the same as Russia, while cotton production consumes lake-sized areas of water often containing pesticides.

And every time we put on a wash, thousands of plastic fibres from polyester and acrylic jumpers go down the drain and into the oceans.

Experts want retailers to pay a penny tax for each garment produced – in turn raising £35million a year to be spent on recycling.

Producers must take responsibi­lity for the waste they create and help pay for clearing it up.

But we all have a responsibi­lity to buy less, reuse, repair and recycle more.

As a result I am setting myself a challenge – a 12-month ban on buying any new clothes.

Apart from underwear, everything else will be secondhand, including the tricky task of sourcing my own wedding dress.

It won’t be easy but fixing fast fashion must be a priority.

Our clothes shouldn’t cost the earth. ■ Will you join the Mirror’s War on Waste? Email me your tips and

annoyances. PRELOVED Dress

Scotland in will be the first country deposit return the UK to introduce a part of a climate scheme – announced as returning glass and action plan. Customers as aluminium and steel plastic bottles, as well to three litres, will drinks cans, from 50ml

Michael Gove. Now it receive 20p. Come on

UK to is time for rest of the catch up.

Annual carbon footprint of over a billion tonnes of CO2 is same as Russia’s

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