The Borneo Post (Sabah)

UK mulls making plastic packaging producers pay for waste disposal

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LONDON: Britain is to set out plans to overhaul its recycling system yesterday, including making plastic packaging producers pay the full cost of dealing with their waste and introducin­g a deposit return scheme for cans and bottles.

The plans, which also aim to make household rubbish collection­s more consistent around the country, will be introduced by Environmen­t Secretary Michael Gove and go out for consultati­on for three months.

“We will introduce a world-leading tax to boost recycled content in plastic packaging, make producers foot the bill for handling their packaging waste, and end the confusion over household recycling,” Gove said in a statement.

The tax will be payable by producers who fail to use enough recycled material.

At present, producers pay only

We will introduce a world-leading tax to boost recycled content in plastic packaging, make producers foot the bill for handling their packaging waste, and end the confusion over household recycling. Michael Gove, Environmen­t Secretary

around 10 per cent of the cost of dealing with plastic packaging waste, the environmen­t ministry said.

Under an Extended Producer Responsibi­lity (EPR) system, the industry will pay higher fees if its packaging is harder to reuse or recycle.

EPR for packaging will raise between 800 million and one billion pounds (US$1 billion1.3 billion) a year for recycling and disposal, the ministry said.

Government will seek views on two options for how a deposit return scheme might work for cans and glass or plastic bottles, it added.

The first would target a large amount of drinks on the market, irrespecti­ve of container size.

The second, known as the ‘onthe-go’ model, would concern smaller container sizes – those most often sold for consumptio­n outside the home.

“This could drive up the recycling of an estimated three billion plastic bottles which are currently incinerate­d, sent to landfill or left to pollute streets, countrysid­e and the marine environmen­t,” the ministry said.

Household waste recycling rates in England have risen from around 11 per cent in 2000/1 to about 45 per cent, but since 2013 rates have plateaued, according to ministry figures. — Reuters

 ??  ?? People walk through the Canary Wharf financial district of London, Britain. Britain is to set out plans to overhaul its recycling system yesterday, including making plastic packaging producers pay the full cost of dealing with their waste and introducin­g a deposit return scheme for cans and bottles. — Reuters photo
People walk through the Canary Wharf financial district of London, Britain. Britain is to set out plans to overhaul its recycling system yesterday, including making plastic packaging producers pay the full cost of dealing with their waste and introducin­g a deposit return scheme for cans and bottles. — Reuters photo

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