Extended Producer Responsibility for Packaging 4.27pm Mr Virendra
Sharma (in the Chair) I will call Dame Nia Griffith to move the
motion and then the Minister to respond. There will not be an
opportunity for the Member in charge to wind up, as is the
convention for 30-minute debates. Dame Nia Griffith (Llanelli)
(Lab) I beg to move, That this House has considered extended
producer responsibility for packaging. It is a pleasure to serve
under your...Request free trial
Extended Producer Responsibility for Packaging
4.27pm
(in the Chair)
I will call Dame to move the motion and then the Minister to respond.
There will not be an opportunity for the Member in charge to wind
up, as is the convention for 30-minute debates.
Dame (Llanelli) (Lab)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered extended producer responsibility
for packaging.
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Sharma. I
share with many, including the Minister, I am sure, a huge
concern about the amount of plastic and packaging waste that is
never collected or recycled and that ends up in landfill, in our
seas or in incinerators, thus polluting our land, sea and air. We
are all aware of the hierarchy of waste—reduce, reuse,
recycle—and the challenges that it poses. It is vital that we
tackle waste and increase recycling, including through
legislation and the extended producer responsibility guidance,
but the scheme must be well designed so that it incentivises
appropriate behaviours. I have every sympathy with the Minister:
that is not an easy task.
I can understand, too, if there is some criticism of, or perhaps
cynicism about, the concerns voiced by industry, because of
course industry is bound to be concerned by any new tax imposed
on it. However, there is general support in industry for the
“producer pays” principle. Industry wants a system that is fair,
and I share its serious concerns about some of the unintended
consequences of the scheme. The Food and Drink Federation says
the industry has significant concerns that the proposed system
will fail to achieve improvements in recycling rates, and is
calling on the Department to be more ambitious in its proposals
by adopting international best practice from the most successful
schemes around the world.
Before addressing more general points, let me share my concerns
about how the current proposals will affect Wiltshire Farm Foods,
which provides ready-made meals in plastic trays that are covered
with a thin polythene film. It delivers those meals to
householders who can then put them in their freezers and heat
them up when they need them. Customers receive regular deliveries
from Wiltshire Farm Foods to their doorsteps. The company saw
that as an opportunity for its delivery staff to collect the used
trays when they arrive with a fresh delivery. For good measure,
it also reuses the cardboard boxes that the trays are carried
in.
Wiltshire Farm Foods’ customer base is made up predominantly of a
generation who are used to washing and putting out the milk
bottles on the doorstep. Their conscientious washing and storing
of the used trays enables the company to make the collections.
The company does not used a cardboard sleeve, although one is
commonly found on similar products. The necessary information is
put on the plastic film, which is the only thing left for the
customer to dispose of. Wiltshire Farm Foods leaves behind 97%
less packaging by weight than other ready meal brands because the
customers return the trays.
In late 2021, the company went one step further. It made a
significant investment in a world-leading packaging recycling
initiative in its factory in Durham. Through its award-winning
“boomerang” project, it now takes the used plastic
CPET—crystalline polyethylene terephthalate —meal trays and
genuinely recycles them by making them into new trays. The
composition of the new trays is up to 85% recycled tray material.
That should be recognised as a significant achievement because it
is much more challenging to recycle plastics than metal and
glass, which can be recycled through the use of well-established
technologies.
In establishing the facility in Durham, Wiltshire Farm Foods has
also onshored the process. It both keeps jobs here and reduces
plastic miles. It is genuine closed-loop recycling and an
exemplar approach to the recycling and reuse of packaging. It
puts the company ahead of the legislation. Can we find a way to
refine the proposed legislation to recognise that? We must give
credit where credit is due.
(Aberconwy) (Con)
My constituent, Laura Fielding, is a community councillor in
Llanfairfechan, and is behind the excellent plastic-free
Llanfairfechan scheme. She highlighted my duty, as a consumer, in
respect of wrapping and packaging after the point of consumption.
Does the hon. Member agree that the same applies to manufacturers
and producers? Their responsibility for packaging lies beyond the
point of sale, and even beyond the point of use, and extends to
its disposal and the consideration of what that means for the
packaging afterwards.
Dame
Absolutely. As I understand it, that is the aim of the extended
producer responsibility legislation: it will ensure that
producers have to take a real interest in that process. However,
it must be done in partnership with the industry and in a way
that the industry feels part of. The scheme must have buy-in,
because it can work only with industry co-operation. We must
ensure that it operates fairly and that those who invest extra
money to improve their processes get some benefit from doing
so.
Last month, in response to a written parliamentary question about
whether the charges to be introduced by the extended producer
responsibility for packaging will apply only to packaging that
enters the consumer waste system, the Minister replied:
“Charges for the management of this waste will apply to all
primary and shipment packaging except where producers can
evidence that their packaging has been emptied and discarded by a
business.”
In response to a different question from the hon. Member for Bath
() regarding how the revised
scheme would apply to closed-loop recycling schemes, the Minister
replied:
“Packaging that is already commonly collected from households
will not be eligible for this offset as this would reduce the
efficiency of household collections”.
That is a major problem for a company like Wiltshire Farm Foods.
We are effectively equating what it does with plastic trays with
plastic waste that enters the waste system.
I am concerned about that statement because, unfortunately, what
we know about recyclable waste items that should be collected by
local authorities and recycled is not at all encouraging. First,
there are all the packaging items that do not go into household
recycling boxes or bags but are strewn about the place as litter
or put into a non-recyclable street bin. That is hardly a
surprise, given that the Environmental Audit Committee report on
plastic bottles found that only about half of local authorities
provide differentiated street litter bins in order to separate
recyclables from black-bag rubbish. Secondly, a householder might
wrongly put that packaging into their black-bag rubbish, or in
the correct household recycling bag but with unwashed items that
drip food content into the bag, so that the whole bag of
recyclables is condemned by the local authority and put in with
the black-bag rubbish.
Even if recyclable packaging items get into the recycling bag or
box correctly, what happens then? We have myriad different
regimes run by different local authorities, with varying end
destinations for their recyclables. Some 47% of recyclables are
sent abroad. What data do we have about the products that they
are made into? Too little, it would seem. Too often, we have seen
pictures of packaging on foreign shores that can be traced back
to the UK, smouldering on the hillside in open landfill or
clogging up waterways, as documented by the BBC, Greenpeace and
Interpol, and highlighted by the National Audit Office, which
reported, putting it mildly, that there is
“a particular risk that some of the material exported overseas is
not fully recycled.”
What do we know about the rest? We know that glass is 100%
recyclable and can be remelted endlessly without ever reducing
its quality, so we would hope the glass collected is fully
recycled and made into new items. Plastic packaging, however, is
another matter. How much of what local authorities collect as
recyclable is actually made into new products? What data does the
Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs have, not just
on what is collected and handed on by local authorities, but on
what actually happens to it, the efficiencies of the processes
that it undergoes, the end products that are produced, and the
value for money and for energy use that are achieved through the
schemes?
Official estimates show the UK’s plastic packaging waste
recycling rate at 47% in 2020 and 44% in 2021. Those estimates
have been questioned by various organisations, including the
National Audit Office, which expressed concerns about undetected
fraud, as well as the concern that I mentioned about what goes
abroad. Anyway, the amount would appear to be less than 50%.
We now face a situation in which a company such as Wiltshire Farm
Foods has invested in a closed-loop system, collecting plastic
trays and using the whole plastic tray to manufacture new ones,
yet it will be taxed as if its trays just went into the waste
system where, as we have seen, potentially only 50% of the trays
would be recycled. The Minister has repeated that in a letter to
the company—the problem that the trays will be equated with
household waste and cannot be considered as any form of exception
or betterment, because technically they could have gone into
householders’ recycling waste bags or boxes.
The packaging may be commonly collected from households but, as I
have explained, its final destination will vary according to the
regimes in place in individual local authorities, and it has a
less than 50% chance of being recycled, whereas 100% of the trays
collected by Wiltshire Farm Foods will be taken back to Durham
and manufactured into new trays. The problem is that firms get no
credit for trying to maximise the collection and recycling of
their packaging. That is a massive disincentive to make any such
investment, whereas they could help to improve our plastic
packaging recycling rates, as well as the efficiency and quality
of that recycling; otherwise, there is no reason for them to do
so.
I do not pretend for one moment that to devise an extended
producer responsibility scheme is easy. Such schemes will be
dependent on co-operation from industry if they are to work
effectively, and it is vital that there is proper consultation
and a response to the concerns raised. I understand there is a
plan for a blanket introduction of the scheme and then to deal
with exceptions or modulated issues, as they are described,
afterwards in 2025. Of course, that will penalise the firms that
have already started.
Many in the food and drink industry support trying to improve the
levels of recycling and understand the importance of the
recyclability of packaging and the urge to reduce the use of
plastic packaging altogether. In view of the concerns raised by
the industry, will the Minister consider pausing the introduction
of the EPR scheme and use the time to work productively with
manufacturers on their concerns and, in particular, to derive and
refine a fair payments regime? Will the EPR rates vary according
to the costs of managing different materials, depending on how
easily they can be recycled and the final market price they can
attract? Will the Minister consider having reduced EPR rates for
firms that have invested or are investing in innovative recycling
methods? As I have mentioned, the scheme begins in 2024, but the
modulated fees whereby the more recyclable a material is, the
less the producer pays will not be introduced until 2025. Will
the Minister consider introducing the modulated fees at the same
time as the main scheme?
How much analysis has the Department done of schemes in operation
in other countries? Belgium, Germany and the Canadian province of
Ontario are often cited as interesting examples. Does the
Minister plan to look further at schemes elsewhere? A number of
countries have much greater industry involvement in the running
of their schemes, whereas in the proposed UK scheme almost all
the necessary tasks to run the scheme will be carried out by the
Government. Will the Minister consider greater private sector and
industry-body involvement in the schemes? Will she explain how
EPR funds will be ringfenced to ensure they are used to improve
our recycling infrastructure? Will she take into account the
impact of all packaging reforms on producers, and weigh up
whether they will have the desired impact without creating an
undue burden on them?
On that note, I shall draw my remarks to a close. I thank
Wiltshire Farm Foods for showing me its trays and how it recycles
them—I was not quite as keen on the minus 20° freezer room that
it showed me. I implore the Minister to take that example very
seriously, because it has ramifications across the industry for
incentivising—or disincentivising—firms so that they do the right
thing.
4.43pm
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Environment, Food
and Rural Affairs ()
It is a pleasure to have you in the Chair, Mr Sharma; I know this
subject is of great interest to you, as is litter, which the
House just had an Adjournment debate on. It all comes into the
sphere we are dealing with. I thank the hon. Member for Llanelli
(Dame ) for bringing this debate on extended producer
responsibility to Westminster Hall. I am pleased to have the
opportunity to outline our schemes in more detail. She asked a
great raft of questions, so if I do not cover all the answers, we
will write to her on some of the outstanding issues, although I
know some of issues have been dealt with in answers to
parliamentary questions.
The hon. Lady and I share some agreement about the need for the
schemes we are introducing and the fact that they are complex.
The schemes will definitely take us in the right direction on
reducing our waste. We agree on the shared goal, which is to
implement a successful UK-wide scheme that serves to improve
recycling and the availability of recycled materials for reuse,
to drive down pollution, and to ensure that the cost of packaging
waste no longer relies so heavily on the public purse. After four
years of extensive engagement across the packaging sectors, the
policy framework to introduce an extended producer responsibility
scheme for packaging across the United Kingdom was outlined in
the Government response published in March 2022. Work is
continuing to make progress in preparation for its
implementation.
Although affected businesses have consistently expressed their
support for high-level extended producer responsibility
objectives and outcomes, some concerns have been raised about
costs, implementation and timelines. I am well aware of that, as
other colleagues in this Chamber have raised some of these
matters with me. I reassure the hon. Member for Llanelli and
others that my Department remains committed to continued intense
engagement with affected businesses to ensure that we deliver our
UK extended producer responsibility scheme in a way that delivers
on the shared goals to transform a linear economic model of
“take, make, use, throw away” to a circular economy. Our aim is
for legislation to be in place in time to start the EPR in
2024-25, as the hon. Lady mentioned.
Before I go further, I will outline how we got to this point and
the rationale for the delivery of the EPR programme. In December
2018, the Government published the resources and waste strategy,
which set out how we will preserve our stock of material
resources by minimising waste, promoting resource efficiency and
moving towards the circular economy. Three significant
commitments in the strategy form the collection and packaging
reforms programme. Those are the extended producer responsibility
scheme for packaging—the EPR—which we are discussing; the deposit
return scheme for drinks containers, known as the DRS; and the
consistency in recycling collection scheme, known simply as
consistency. That is the consistency of collection at the
doorstep by local authorities.
The idea is that they dovetail together. They will help us to
deliver our goals on protecting the climate, driving green growth
and driving down unnecessary waste—all goals set out by this
Government and the devolved Administrations in their policy
documents. As a result of our reforms, particularly in relation
to the EPR, we expect the figure for recycling rigid
plastics—excluding drinks bottles in the DRS—to reach 48% by
2025, broadly comparable with what Wiltshire Farm Foods are doing
at the moment. By 2030, we expect that to rise significantly to
about 62%. That is the direction in which we aim to drive all
packaging producers.
The overall objective of the EPR scheme is to encourage
businesses to consider how much packaging they use, and to design
and use packaging that is much easier to recycle, and to
encourage the use of reusables, refillables and so forth. We have
committed to setting ambitious new packaging waste recycling
targets for producers. The EPR measures will be key to achieving
the targets. We propose minimum recycling target rates from
2024-30 for each of the six packaging materials: plastic, wood,
aluminium, steel, paper and card, and glass. We will introduce
targets for fibre-based composite packaging in 2026.
EPR will allow businesses to make their own arrangements to
collect and recycle their packaging, where local authorities are
not required to collect those packaging items for recycling. EPR
will incentivise producers to recycle packaging that is reused
multiple times, such as milk bottles, and to offset the packaging
that they recycle against their obligated disposal costs.
However, EPR will not allow for offsetting of packaging where it
is collected by more than 75% of local authorities, except where
it is part of a reuse system. That is primarily because we will
take steps, through our consistency measures, to place
requirements on local authorities to collect, for recycling, at
least the common set of materials that I outlined.
If we incentivise producers to collect their own packaging, which
we are also requiring local authorities to collect, that will
reduce the efficiency of kerbside collections overall and
therefore increase costs for producers. It will undermine that
system, which will be a cornerstone of the whole triage.
Dame
What plans does the Minister have to sort out where the
recyclable rubbish ends up? One of the big concerns is that not
every local authority takes it to a place where it is 100%
reused.
That is a really important part of the circle and of our
engagement. It is a question of ensuring that we have industry
capable of taking all that material. We are working together in a
pipeline, because clearly the system will not work unless that is
all joined up.
To go back to my previous point, if producers all start to do
their own thing and the kerbside collection is undermined, that
will increase costs for the producers that are going through that
system, because it will mean that the costs are spread over a
lower tonnage of packaging waste collected. If we look across
industry as a whole, we see that that would not be in the
interests of the development of our circular economy ethos. We
will publish the Government response to the consistency in
collections consultation shortly. That will give more clarity to
the whole issue very soon.
Through payment of disposal costs, businesses will pay for the
collection and management of their packaging from households. We
want to increase kerbside recycling through consistency and the
EPR measures, and to do so in a way that optimises efficient and
high-performing services. When the payments are calculated, that
will be based on the efficient services of local authorities. We
do not want that to be based on a less efficient authority, so we
will follow the best models and expect local authorities to do
that. We have complete agreement on that with business. I think
that that particular point was raised.
(Rugby) (Con)
I draw attention to my entry in the Register of Members’
Financial Interests. What did my hon. Friend the Minister make of
the suggestion from the hon. Member for Llanelli (Dame ) that there should be more private sector
involvement in the operation of our EPR system?
I thank my hon. Friend, who has made valuable contributions to
this discussion and debate. I cannot stress enough that we are
working closely with industry and want to continue to do so. I
have had a lot of conversations about this particular issue, and
it is really important that we involve business as much as we
can. I cannot say more now, but that has definitely been noted,
because after all, businesses are the ones with the experience
and the knowledge. We need them to get on board with us.
We want to incentivise reusable and refillable packaging. The
hon. Member for Llanelli outlined in some detail the example of
Wiltshire Farm Foods, which made really significant strides
before all these schemes came on board, thinking outside the box
and doing its own recycling, and so forth. There must be even
more potential, one would have thought, for it to look at reusing
its packaging and encouraging reuse takeaway-style. I would be
happy to meet that company. It would be interesting to explore
further what we might learn from it or how it could take on the
model that I am suggesting to make it work. A next phase of
policy development that we are looking at is to encourage the use
of reusable packaging, because that is a really important part of
this.
We appreciate that these reforms affect business operations. We
have been listening to the feedback and have already amended the
proposals, following the consultation. We will continue to work
closely on the design of the scheme and the delivery. We have run
some eight-week workshops, like speed dating, and lots of useful
material has come out of that. We will be doing much more.
EPR is a longer-term endeavour in the continuous improvement and
reform of our collection and packaging services and we are
looking at other schemes around the world. I went with a whole
team from DEFRA and others to Belgium to look at their system, as
they are world leaders in this and have been running their scheme
for a very long time. Ours is different because we are
introducing it later, when lots of businesses have had their own
thoughts and ideas. We cannot just completely copy what they are
doing in Belgium, because we are a slightly different example,
but we certainly learned some very good lessons from going there.
We will continue to engage with business and industry.
Will the Minister give way?
I will very quickly before I wind up.
The Minister has twice mentioned that she has been over to the
continent to see exemplars and learn from those who are further
down this path than us, which I think is a terrific step. Has she
given consideration to her point about the reuse of recycled
materials? I hear concerns that the availability of that material
is becoming a key issue. Larger players are consuming or using up
large amounts, making it less available for smaller
manufacturers.
My hon. Friend makes a very good point, which we are discussing
with industry. It is critical that we have enough material to put
back into the system and that our measures on exporting and so
forth all play into that space, in terms of how much goes abroad,
whether that is being constructively used, and cracking down on
illegally exporting waste and keeping it in this country. All
those points are part of the whole circular economy issue.
We will continue to focus on delivering our EPR scheme, and the
overall ethos is to protect the environment, improve management
of packaging waste and transition us towards implementing the
scheme.
Question put and agreed to.
|