The European
Parliament today voted to back strong waste and recycling
targets, and pushed for solutions to the fundamental problem of Europe's
resource overconsumption.
The vote comes
after the European Commission controversially shelved its flagship piece of
waste and resource legislation – the circular economy package – last year. It
has since promised to re-table it in a "more ambitious" form.
In June, The
Parliament's Environment Committee backed binding measures to
boost recycling and cut EU waste and resource dependency as part of the revised
package. Today's plenary vote formally accepted the vast majority of these
proposals, including:
- Binding
recycling targets – a 70% target for municipal solid waste and an 80%
target for packaging waste by 2030
- Measures to
cut incineration of non-recyclable waste after 2020, and the removal of
incineration subsidies
- Legally
binding proposals to measure 'footprint indicators' for land, materials,
water and carbon by 2018– the first step towards reducing resource
consumption
However, MEPs
stopped short of backing a legally binding 30% "resource
productivity" target – which would begin the process of cutting overall
resource use in the EU. Instead, a weaker 30% voluntary target was adopted.
Ariadna Rodrigo,
resource use campaigner at Friends of the Earth Europe said
"The Parliament has provided the baseline which the new circular
economy package must live up to. True 'ambition' means not just dealing with
waste and recycling, but taking concrete steps to address the fundamental
problem of resource overconsumption in the EU. The next step must be to set
binding resource reduction targets, but measuring what we consume is a strong
start.
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