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Recycling targets 'unachievable', says industry

By Hamish Champ
Posted 25 September 2012

The UK plastics industry has slammed the government over its refusal to move on its recycling targets, adding that ministers had no plan on how such goals should be achieved.

In a withering attack the industry said the government had “repeatedly ignored its warnings that its targets – set to rise from 32% currently to 57% by 2017 – are unachievable unless there is significant investment in the logistics of collection and recycling”.

Speaking on behalf of the Plastics 2020 Challenge, Barry Turner, head of the Packaging and Films Association (Pafa), said the onus was being put on packaging producers to ensure enough material was collected, when in fact it should be placed with local authorities which controlled collections.

“The fact is that, in the absence of resource-based recycling targets, there is no incentive for councils to invest in collection services – even less so when their budgets are already stretched to the limit,” added Turner.

The plastics sector has also pointed to downward revisions by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) of its estimates on UK recycling capacity “which, together with the difficulties in getting councils to step up their recycling efforts and the absence of material-specific targets on local authorities, make it impossible to achieve the required additional 520,000 tonnes of plastic for recycling needed under the government’s five-year target”.
       
Philip Law, public & industrial affairs director of the British Plastics Federation (BPF), said the government’s “ill thought out and fragmented approach” would see companies obligated to foot the bill for recycling that cannot be delivered.

“This is a no-win for everybody, including the government, who will have to explain their failure in the future,” Law added.

Jan-Erik Johansson of Plastics Europe also condemned the government’s approach. “As a Europe-wide organisation, we are surprised at the continually shifting positions from the UK government with the result that our industry can only conclude they are not serious about working with everyone in the recycling chain to achieve effective, consistent and achievable results in this crucial area of sustainability,” he said.


Comment on this article.

Comments:

Finally, the patina of spin is being cleaned off the bleak picture that is the daily reality of plastics recycling in the UK. Grim though it is, this is a better starting point than the rosy picture of meeting plastics recycling targets, which Defra funded WRAP to paint. Let's hope that the plastics industry will now take ownership of this issue from the waste management industry, and come up with a feasible plan.

- 26 September 2012 - Peter Reineck

At long last the king has been seen to have no clothes on. Defra’s unwarranted and hubristic plastic recycling targets are finally receiving the ridicule they deserve both from industry and from within parliament. If only they had chosen to listen to the BPF, Recoup and the ACP, to name but a few, rather than to so called ‘experts’ who, let us remember, are people who know an awful lot about very little, Defra would not be in the embarrassing mess it is in today. I think they would be well advised to change their advisors as well as their ministers…

- 25 September 2012 - Bernard Chase

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