Biodegradable
and compostable plastics do not prevent plastic pollution and should not be an
excuse to keep consuming single-use plastics, the European Parliament
recognised in a vote today. The Parliament voted to strengthen the European
Commission’s plans to slash plastic pollution, under the European Strategy for
Plastics in a Circular Economy launched in January 2018.
Speaking on
behalf of the Rethink Plastic alliance, ECOS programme manager Ioana Popescu
said: “Biodegradable or not, plastics are clogging our land and oceans,
threatening the health of humans and animals. The Parliament today has
acknowledged that biodegradable plastics are not a silver bullet to our plastic
pollution crisis, but merely a distraction from real solutions. Policies that
dramatically cut our plastic footprint need to be urgently implemented.”
The European
Parliament called for a number of additional measures that go beyond the
Commission’s original proposals, including:
- A ban on
microplastics in cosmetics, personal care products, detergents and
cleaning products by 2020, and concrete measures to tackle other sources
of microplastics;
- A complete
ban on oxo-degradable plastics – a source of microplastic pollution – by
2020;
- The
reduction of hazardous substances in plastics, to ensure that what is
recycled is free from dangerous chemicals;
- That the
priority should be to prevent plastic waste from being produced in the
first place, followed by reuse and recycling, with landfill or
incineration of plastic waste as a last resort.
However, the
European Parliament failed to back measures to tackle widespread pollution from
plastic pellets, which are melted down to make everyday plastic items. It also
failed to support stronger economic incentives to reduce plastic production and
consumption.
The European
Commission has already begun to implement some measures announced in its
Plastics Strategy, notably a proposal on legislation to reduce marine pollution
from single-use plastics and fishing gear, currently being discussed both in
the European Parliament and by national governments.