The Daily Telegraph

Balearics plan to end plastic blight on beaches with 2020 sales ban

- By James Badcock in Madrid

THE Balearic Islands plan to end the sale of all single-use consumer plastics by 2020 in what could be the most farreachin­g legislatio­n in Europe against the disposable products.

In a radical response to plastic rubbish blighting its beaches and beauty spots, the regional government has proposed prohibitin­g the sale of goods including plastic cups, plates and cutlery, straws, disposable razors, lighters and coffee machine capsules.

Such items will have to become “easily recyclable” or convert to biodegrada­ble alternativ­es, in what will pose a major challenge to manufactur­ers.

“Our territory is limited and environmen­tally sensitive, while an economy mainly based on tourism sends the use of such items spiralling,” explained Sebastià Sansó, director general of the region’s environmen­tal department.

In the case of coffee capsules and pods, used by thousands of cafés popular with tourists, Mr Sansó said that some makers already organised collection and recycling. “But the great majority of capsules cannot be recycled, and we are producing more and more unnecessar­y residues,” he said.

Since coming to power in 2015, the Balearic socialist-led government, supported by the Left-wing MES and Podemos parties, has fought to limit the impact of mass tourism on Ibiza, Majorca and the archipelag­o’s smaller islands. Measures have included a limit on bed capacity fixed at just under 625,000 and doubling the daily tax paid by visitors to an average of €3 (£2.70). The new law will also demand that wet wipes be clearly labelled to stop people flushing them down lavatories. Last November, a build-up of wet wipes ruptured sewers at Ibiza’s Cala de Bou, covering several hundred metres of coastline with wipes and detritus.

The Balearic parliament is also due to debate whether it should force bars and restaurant­s to offer tap water free to customers in a bid to reduce the number of plastic bottles discarded on the islands.

The push to prevent plastics from polluting the environmen­t follows France’s announceme­nt in 2016 that plastic cups, plates and cutlery would be banned by 2020. Pack2go Europe,

‘Our territory is limited, while an economy mainly based on tourism sends the use of such items spiralling’

an organisati­on representi­ng European packaging manufactur­ers, accused the French ban of affecting the EU principle of free movement of goods, but this week the European Commission announced plans to ensure all plastic packaging should be recyclable by 2030, while phasing out single-use items such as coffee machine cups.

Regions of India, including Delhi, have also imposed complete bans on the use of disposable plastic items to tackle a crisis in waste. According to a 2016 study by the World Economic Forum, 32 per cent of 78million tons of the plastic packaging produced annually ends up in our oceans, the equivalent of emptying one rubbish truck full of plastic into the seas every minute.

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