British Plastics Federation: Govt proposal to create extra $70 mn burden
Plastic Recycling | 2012-02-07 06:09:00 | By Paul Ploumis
The BPF is disappointed that the views of DEFRA's own expert committee, the Advisory Committee of Packaging's Plastic Packaging Recycling Task Force has been ignored.
LONDON (Scrap Monster): The Government's preferred proposal for plastics packaging by 2017 adds a further burden to an already struggling sector. The direct cost to plastics packaging producers and handlers would be an extra £70 million over 5 years which is in effect a direct and unfair tax on the packaging sector to support an unachievable target. The Government uses excessive growth figures for plastics packaging which have been widely ridiculed within the industry.
Bruce Margetts, Chair of the BPFs Packaging Group, expressed his concerns towards the targets: As plastics packaging producers we want to retain the maximum value in the packaging after it has done its primary job, but this target is unrealistic in its timescale and rate of increase. It appears to be a straightforward tax on producers rather than a realistic road-map for infrastructure and quality improvement. Production and filling of packaging could be lost from the UK.
Jonathan Bloom, Senior Executive Industrial Issues, at the BPF believes 'that a more gradual increase in targets should be adopted to move through to 2017 and beyond as previously advised by industry and resulting in a percentage point recycling rate no more than the mid thirties by 2017 which in itself is a substantial but achievable target. To achieve these targets there must be full support of all the stakeholders within the plastics packaging supply chain.
Essential to increasing plastics packaging recycling is standardized local authority collection sorting and recycling, tackling the quality issues, substantial investment in waste recovery facilities and discouraging of exports of waste which is unlikely to be achieved by 2017
The BPF is disappointed that the views of DEFRA's own expert committee, the Advisory Committee of Packaging's Plastic Packaging Recycling Task Force has been ignored.
DEFRA's preferred option flies in the face of Government policy stated by the Chancellor George Osborne MP in his Autumn Statement: “We shouldn't price British business out of the world economy. If we burden them with endless social and environmental goals – however worthy in their own right – then not only will we not achieve those goals, but the businesses will fail, jobs will be lost, and our country will be poorer.”