Western Mail

MPs in call for bottle deposit to turn tide on plastics waste

- Emily Beament newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

AUK-wide scheme to charge a deposit for drinks bottles, which is paid back when they are returned for recycling, is needed to turn the tide on plastic waste, MPs urged.

All public premises that serve food or drink including leisure and sports centres should be required to provide free drinking water on request, to cut the use of throw-away water bottles, and public water fountains should be encouraged.

And companies should be made financiall­y responsibl­e for the plastic packaging they produce, the Environmen­tal Audit Committee said.

The government should also bring in rules for 50% recycled plastic content in plastic bottles to be achieved by 2023 at the latest, they urged.

In a new report, the committee warned that only 7.5 billion of the 13 billion plastic bottles used in the UK each year are recycled, while the rest end up in landfill, are littered or incinerate­d.

Burning or throwing bottles into landfill produces around 233,000 tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions a year, while littered plastic bottles harm the countrysid­e and wildlife and end up in the seas, where they make up a third of all plastic pollution.

With the issue of ocean plastic pollution high on the agenda in the wake of the BBC’s Blue Planet II nature series and campaigns by organisati­ons from Greenpeace to Sky, potential measures to cut plastic waste are under the spotlight.

Mary Creagh, chairwoman of the Environmen­tal Audit Committee, said: “Urgent action is needed to protect our environmen­t from the devastatin­g effects of marine plastic pollution which, if it continues to rise at current rates, will outweigh fish by 2050. Our throw-away society uses 13 billion plastic bottles each year, around half of which are not recycled. Plastic bottles make up a third of all plastic pollution in the sea, and are a growing litter problem on UK beaches.

“We need action at individual, council, regional and national levels to turn back the plastic tide.”

The UK’s recycling rate for plastic bottles has stalled for the past five years, the MPs said.

While consumptio­n of on-the-go soft drinks and water increases, measures are needed to stop bottles ending up as litter or landfill, and the government should introduce a deposit return scheme for such bottles to boost recycling rates to 90%.

And with 7.7 billion plastic water bottles being used each year in the UK, reducing their use is a priority, the report says. All public premises which serve food or drink, not just – as at present – those that are licensed, should be required to provide free drinking water.

The government should also look at the health and litter-reducing benefits of providing public water fountains and give water companies formal powers to erect them, the report said.

 ??  ?? > Just 7.5 billion of the 13 billion plastic bottles used in the UK each year are recycled
> Just 7.5 billion of the 13 billion plastic bottles used in the UK each year are recycled

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