Houston Chronicle

European leaders back single-use plastics ban

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

BERLIN — Plastic knives just won’t cut it any longer, if the European Union has its way.

The 28-nation bloc moved closer to banning single-use straws, plates, cutlery and cotton swabs, after officials from EU member states and the European Parliament on Wednesday backed recommenda­tions by its executive branch designed to reduce marine pollution.

Environmen­tal campaigner­s have been calling for curbs on throwaway plastic that’s accumulati­ng in the oceans because, unlike organic materials, it doesn’t decompose but simply breaks down into ever smaller pieces.

Scientific studies have found minuscule particles known as microplast­ics are being consumed by animals throughout the food chain, though the impact on human health is unclear.

“When we have a situation where one year you can bring your fish home in a plastic bag, and the next year you are bringing that bag home in a fish, we have to work hard and work fast,” said Karmenu Vella, the European commission­er for environmen­t, maritime affairs and fisheries.

The EU’s executive branch, the European Commission, estimates that almost 60 percent of the 28.4 million tons of plastic waste produced in the bloc each year comes from packaging, with much of it exported to third countries rather than recycled.

Once the ban is formally approved, countries will have two years to restrict the use of singleuse plastic products, though plastic cups are exempt for now.

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