- Government to consult on banning a range of polluting
plastics this Autumn
- Single-use plastic plates and cutlery among items under
review
- Builds on strong progress to prevent all avoidable plastic
waste by 2042
The war on plastic waste is set to be ramped up with fresh
plans to stop the supply of a range of single-use plastics that
threaten our natural environment.
Single-use plastic plates, cutlery and polystyrene cups are
among a raft of items that could be banned in England as part of
a new public consultation being launched in the Autumn. These
proposals will lead to businesses using more sustainable
alternatives and prevent plastic litter from polluting our
landscapes.
It is estimated that each person uses a staggering 18
single-use plastic plates and 37 single-use plastic items of
cutlery each year in England.1 The
durability of plastic means litter from items used for a few
minutes can last for centuries in landfill or as litter in the
countryside or ocean. Around the world, more than one million
birds and over 100,000 sea mammals and turtles die every year
from eating or getting tangled in plastic
waste.
Industry is taking action to tackle plastic waste, such as
through the UK Plastics Pact, a collaboration between businesses
from across the entire plastics value chain, supported by the
government and coordinated by the Waste and Resources Action
Programme (WRAP). Pact members have identified eight problematic
plastic items for elimination and are investigating further
items. We want to build on both the progress being made by
industry and our action on plastic waste.
The UK government has already taken major steps to tackle
plastic pollution, banning microbeads in rinse-off personal care
products, dramatically reducing the number of plastic bags being
used and restricting the supply of single-use plastic straws,
stirrers and cotton buds. These plans will build on the success
of those measures and form part of the Government’s commitment to
prevent all avoidable plastic waste by the end of 2042.
Environment Secretary said:
“We’ve all seen the damage that plastic does to our
environment. It is right that we put in place measures that will
tackle the plastic carelessly strewn across our parks and green
spaces and washed up on beaches.
“We have made progress to turn the tide on plastic, banning
the supply of plastic straws, stirrers and cotton buds, while our
carrier bag charge has cut sales by 95% in the main
supermarkets.
“Now we are looking to go a step further as we build back
greener. These plans will help us stamp out the unnecessary use
of plastics that wreak havoc with our natural
environment.”
Jo Morley, Head of Campaigns at City to Sea,
said:
“We welcome the news that the government are taking steps
to tackle some of the most polluting single-use items. This is a
much-needed move, that we as campaigners have been calling for,
along with thousands of our supporters and members of the
public.
“We need now to take a leading role in banning unnecessary
single-use plastics to see real benefits for the nation's and the
world’s wildlife."
Further details of the consultation, including the full
list of single-use items under review, will be announced in the
upcoming weeks.
The UK is a global leader in combatting plastic waste.
Following the huge success of the 5p charge on single-use carrier
bags, which cut sales in the main supermarkets by 95% since 2015,
we increased the minimum charge to 10p and extended it to all
retailers, ensuring we can take billions more bags out of
circulation.
Our landmark Environment Bill will give us a raft of new
powers to step-up our war against plastic pollution and litter,
including:
- Introducing a Deposit Return Scheme for drinks containers to
recycle billions more plastic bottles and stop them being
landfilled, incinerated, or littered. Through a small deposit
placed on drinks products, the DRS will incentivise people to
recycle;
- Our Extended Producer Responsibility scheme will mean
companies will be expected to cover the full cost of recycling
and disposing of their packaging. Producers of commonly littered
packaging will be made more responsible for their littered
packaging, with fees paid to cover the cost of cleaning up and
for litter prevention activities; and
- Our plans for Consistent Recycling Collections for every
household and business in England will ensure more plastic is
recycled.
We will also introduce a world-leading plastic packaging
tax from April 2022, set at £200 per tonne, on plastic packaging
which doesn’t meet a minimum threshold of at least 30% recycled
content. This will encourage greater use of recycled plastic,
leading to increased levels of recycling and plastic waste
collection, helping to tackle the problem of plastic waste and
protect our environment.
ENDS
1Statistics taken from a preliminary
assessment of the economic impacts of a
potential ban on plastic cutlery, plastic plates and plastic
balloon sticks, 2018.