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EU Parliament votes for ban on single-use plastic

October 24, 2018

European lawmakers have approved measures to reduce plastics polluting seas and oceans. A proposed ban targets the top 10 single-use plastic products that litter Europe's beaches.

Huge amount of plastic garbage floats at the surface of a sea.
Image: picture-alliance/Photoshot

The European Parliament on Wednesday approved measures that could lead to a ban on single-use plastic items, including straws, cotton swabs and disposable plastic plates and cutlery, by 2021. The parliament backed the proposals with a 571-53 majority.

In May, the European Commission proposed EU-wide rules to target the top 10 single-use plastic items that litter Europe's beaches or are found in its seas, as well as lost and abandoned fishing gear. 

What did the European Commission propose?

  • A ban on the use of plastic items like straws, cotton swabs, plastic plates and cutlery, plastic coffee stirrers and plastic balloon holders. EU lawmakers on Wednesday added very lightweight plastic bags and polystyrene fast-food containers to the list.
  • Reduce the use of plastic food containers, such as the ones used for take-away, and cups for beverages.
  • Producers will help cover the costs of waste management and cleanup as well as raise awareness of the polluting impacts of tobacco products with filters (such as cigarette butts), wet wipes, balloons, plastic bags and candy and potato chip wrappers.
  • Member states should use a deposit refund scheme or any other measure to collect 90 percent of single-use plastic bottles by 2025.
  • Menstrual pads, wet wipes and balloons will be required to add a label indicating how to dispose of the product properly.
  • Member states should raise awareness about the dangers of single-use plastic items.
  • Producers of plastic fishing gear will be required to cover the costs of waste collection in ports.

The menace of plastic waste: Plastic waste poses a major threat to birds, fish and other marine animals. According to the European Commission, only just under a third of plastic waste is collected and recycled. Most of the remaining plastic waste ends up in our seas and oceans. It proves hazardous to fish and other marine animals, which consume the waste or get caught in it. A study has shown that microplastics, which take ages to degrade, have even entered the human food chain.

Read more: Microplastics now found in our poop

Image: DW

What happens next? With the lawmakers approving the measures, the European Commission will now negotiate with member states to implement the ban by adapting to the proposed changes. The commission is pushing for the new plastic rules to be finally approved by the parliament and the European Council before European elections in May next year.

ap/rt (dpa, Reuters, AFP, AP)

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