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EU Earth

EU To Ban Plastic Plates, Cups, and Cutlery by 2021; Will Require Plastic Bottles Be Made of 25% Recycled Content By 2025 (fastcompany.com) 261

The European Union has decided to ban plastic consumer items including plates, cutlery and straws as of 2021 to help clean up oceans. The prohibition on single-use plastics approved by the European Parliament this week in Strasbourg, France, also applies to beverage cups, food containers and cotton bud sticks. A report adds: The new legislation also states that by 2025, plastic bottles should be made of 25 percent recycled content. The new legislation also sets an admirable target of recycling 90 percent of plastic bottles by 2029 -- as well as a goal of making them out of 30 percent recycled material by 2030. Parliament originally rolled out its plan at the end of 2018 and have now made good on the ambition directive.
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EU To Ban Plastic Plates, Cups, and Cutlery by 2021; Will Require Plastic Bottles Be Made of 25% Recycled Content By 2025

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday March 28, 2019 @01:37PM (#58349064)
    I'm old enough to remember that this move to plastic was driven by "good intentions" back in the 70s because all the products were destroying the trees because of the demand on paper, pulp and wood products. Plastic after all was RECYCLABLE... except nobody bothered and now that China won't do the recycling the governments don't care to spend the money on infrastructure when they can use it to pay off their political cronies at inflated rates.
    This emotionalist and irrational (yes, irrational) response to a problem could easily be handled by better pollution monitoring, regulation and better recycling. But that would require a government that actually did its job and not just run to ban things because it makes them feel better to assuage a 12 year old's shoddy science fair paper.
    • by Ichijo ( 607641 ) on Thursday March 28, 2019 @02:07PM (#58349272) Journal

      We didn't realize back then that plastics were slowly making their way into our food supply [npr.org]. Do you think that "better pollution monitoring, regulation and better recycling" is enough to fix that without also banning single-use plastics?

      • We didn't need to know plastics were making it into our food supply. We were already well aware of the problem because of trash strewn all over the landscape [youtube.com]. I grew up in the 70s too and agree with OP. Who the hell thought replacing paper with plastic (which we already knew was extremely durable and took forever to degrade) for single use products was a good idea? I wouldn't place blame entirely upon the environmental movement though. The oil industry was probably involved too, advocating widespread a
        • That is actually really insightful.

          Comparing a planet with tonnes of non-recycled paper in landfills vs. one without comes out very much in favor for the former with regard to CO2 sequestration. Are there any downsides to this approach?

    • Things are different now. Back then sustainable forest management wasn't a thing, the trees were dying due to the acid rain and the wood usage used to be far more wasteful. Nowadays in the developed countries acid rain is a thing of the past, all forests are managed and thanks to the widespread usage of fibre boards and paper recycling the wood usage is far more efficient and nothing is wasted.

    • I'm curious... how practical are disposable utensils made of wood, anyway? I've never seen anyone using them in the US.

      Are they as bad as the paper straws that everyone seems to be switching to?

      • I'm curious... how practical are disposable utensils made of wood, anyway? I've never seen anyone using them in the US.

        I have seen them many times in the SF Bay Area. They work fine. Many are made from bamboo.

        The problem is cost. They are several times the cost of plastic.

      • Ordinary wood sucks because it's very unpleasant to slide your tongue or lips over it.

    • The problem with plastic is that it isn't biodegradable. No natural process can break it down. Plastic photodegrades and that can take hundreds of years. Small broken down pieces of plastic soak up poisonous chemicals and are eaten by animals and fish. And thus enter the entire food chain. Very many bird and fish are killed by plastic every year.
  • airport restaurants now? Cool.
  • Well at least it makes a little more sense than banning just plastic straws like California? Not being able to get a plastic straw when drinking out of a plastic cup with a plastic lid is just silly. Especially when waxed paper cups work as a much better alternative to plastic than the stupid flimsy paper straws we're supposed to use instead.
  • Ban ALL plastic? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Locke2005 ( 849178 ) on Thursday March 28, 2019 @01:52PM (#58349164)
    Here at Microsoft, we have BioWare. Apparently it's not just the name of a game, it's all the name of biodegradable "plastic" utensils, which we're told to dispose of in the compost bin. Other places are using a corn-derived plastic substitute that is biodegradable.
    • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *
      BioWare was the name of a game development studio, not a game :)
      • by PPH ( 736903 )

        So Microsoft will buy them, shut down the gaming division and have all the devs cranking out plastic sporks.

    • Here at Microsoft, we have BioWare. Apparently it's not just the name of a game, it's all the name of biodegradable "plastic" utensils, which we're told to dispose of in the compost bin. Other places are using a corn-derived plastic substitute that is biodegradable.

      Splutter ... splutter ... you can't just go and make plastic that isn't bad!

      Where would we get our moral superiority then????

    • Here at Microsoft, we have BioWare. Apparently it's not just the name of a game, it's all the name of biodegradable "plastic" utensils, which we're told to dispose of in the compost bin. Other places are using a corn-derived plastic substitute that is biodegradable.

      A few small restaurants around here use the same kind of thing. I like the goal of the legislation (assuming that the ban doesn't cover those compostable/biodegradable substitutes), but I think 2021 is a bit too aggressive of a deadline to allow those substitutes to be available widely enough.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Best thing is to avoid disposable utensils as far as possible.

      Japan used to use a hell of a lot of wooden disposable chopsticks. First they started using recycled wood where possible. Now they switched to reusable ones and just wash them.

  • by nwaack ( 3482871 ) on Thursday March 28, 2019 @02:04PM (#58349246)
    Can anyone tell me why these things aren't being mass produced with bamboo? There's so much we could make out of bamboo and it grows so readily in so many places, yet it's so underutilized.
    • It's a matter of the labor involved in farming and processing bamboo. If it takes more labor, it's more-expensive. Expense flows downstream to the consumer, which means people are poorer (you use more labor to make things, thus all human labor makes fewer things, thus people cannot buy as much because they cannot trade their labor for as much because of the laws of physics).

    • by fazig ( 2909523 )
      I am not sure about mass production, but many of these things are already available. Things like (possible multiuse) bamboo plates and cutlery as well as disposable straws, bowls, and cups are easily available all the time here in Germany through Amazon [amazon.de] and some times through supermarkets/discounters as well.
      I suppose the main problem people have with these is their price. Most bamboo products are more expensive than single use plastic equivalents.
  • Because the Baltic is full of garbage.
  • I agree in principle that we should not needlessly waste oil or produce trash. But an outright ban has a habit of giving you unforeseen consequences in corner cases. We have market-based regulations available that produce the desired outcome at a lower cost. Place a Pigouvian Tax on manufacturing these items. Bonus: you can marginally lower some other tax or decrease deficits.

    • by lgw ( 121541 )

      has a habit of giving you unforeseen consequences in corner cases.

      Worried about the real-world consequences of a feel-good measure? if you're not conservative already, you're well on your way.

      • has a habit of giving you unforeseen consequences in corner cases.

        Worried about the real-world consequences of a feel-good measure? if you're not conservative already, you're well on your way.

        You know, I used to consider myself a social liberal and economic conservative because of your point. But I have gone the other way. No I consider myself a fully blown liberal because they will at least recognize that a market failure needs fixing.

        • by lgw ( 121541 )

          You seem to be confusing conservatives with anarchists, or perhaps with DC politicians. Funny how the two overlap.

    • I agree in principle that we should not needlessly waste oil or produce trash. But an outright ban has a habit of giving you unforeseen consequences in corner cases. We have market-based regulations available that produce the desired outcome at a lower cost. Place a Pigouvian Tax on manufacturing these items. Bonus: you can marginally lower some other tax or decrease deficits.

      I just want this plastic crap eliminated the mechanism why which that is achieved is immaterial if it works. Going the banning route just forces innovators to find better alternative solutions that are easier to dispose or recycle. I have every confidence in industry's ability to come up with new and better tech if they are forced to.

    • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

      I agree in principle that we should not needlessly waste oil or produce trash. But an outright ban has a habit of giving you unforeseen consequences in corner cases.

      I'd be happy if they would just write laws in ways that avoid the easily foreseen consequences. Sometimes, I think the average politician lacks the foresight of a goat. Other times, I'm sure of it.

  • Not exactly correct (Score:4, Informative)

    by WillAffleckUW ( 858324 ) on Thursday March 28, 2019 @02:16PM (#58349352) Homepage Journal

    You can still make "plastic" plates cups and cutlery that are derived from:

    seaweed (in fact the basic science for this has been known for a decade) - this composts naturally, and is usually coated with a thin film that is not water soluble, but will eventually biodegrade if exposed to sunlight (will take longer if kept in landfills)

    vegetable fibers (we've used these in entire countries, and at most major universities - anyplace that you see the compost bin says "university plates, utensils and food containers are compostable") - made in large scale, these are fairly close to the costs of plastic.

    The early ones from around the 1990s melted too fast, the 2000s were a bit better, but the 2020 version is fairly good - the only exception is if you leave it in your hot (not warm, hot) drink for more than an hour. Why are you taking up a seat for that long? Use a biodegradable ceramic or metal or glass container if you're taking that long, slacker!

  • I'm Canadian, we are the worst polluters in the world. 23 tons per person of green house gas*. Trump's America is only 19 tons. My plastic plates and utensils waste might not even be an entire kg in a year. Also in most of the western world we don't use our rivers as garbage dumps. The great plastic patch in the pacific isn't because people are using plastic bags it's because people are just dumping shit in their rivers. So seriously what fucking problem are these greens trying to solve? You want to
    • No, that's because of tar sands and long commutes in low mpg trucks.

      You can fix both. You can't even make a profit on tar sands below $70, of course, so massive subsidies are part of the economy.

  • Nothing better than a beer in a paper cup!

  • Why doesn't th eUS and the EU simply ban anything made of plastic, and make it a capital crime to be caught using it?

    THis will without doubt, fuolly and certainly cure thed problem. Plastics will disappear from th eoceans overnight, never to plague thte world again.....

    Oh...hold on..... No it won't. Because the EU isn't the problem, and the USA isn't the problem.

    This won't remotely put a dent in the problem. Because the countries that are the problem don't give a damn other than being really happy t

    • "Virtue signalling that accomplishes nothing."

      Years ago, we used to have ring pulls. Now, we have ring pushes. No longer are cities and countries covered with ring pulls. No longer do you risk lacerations from ring pulls on the beach.

      Do we still have rubbish in our cities? Well, yes. Can you still get your feet cut on broken glass on the beach? Well, yes. But it is better than it was, and this is no nothing, it is a good thing.

      Getting rid of plastic cutlery is a small thing also. But, it is probably a good

      • "Virtue signalling that accomplishes nothing."

        Years ago, we used to have ring pulls. Now, we have ring pushes. No longer are cities and countries covered with ring pulls. No longer do you risk lacerations from ring pulls on the beach.

        Do we still have rubbish in our cities? Well, yes. Can you still get your feet cut on broken glass on the beach? Well, yes. But it is better than it was, and this is no nothing, it is a good thing.

        Getting rid of plastic cutlery is a small thing also. But, it is probably a good thing, unless it becomes an excuse for not doing other things. But, let's give it the benefit of the doubt. It is signalling virtue, because it is virtuous. Not very virtuous, but a little bit.

        Yes - the EU will tidy up their part of the globe, shuffling the papers around, insuring every glass is in place, making it so wonderful, and that everyone will feel sssooooo good, while China and Africa, will continut to do as they will, dumping huge amounts of plastic into th eworld's oceans. Then the hand wringers will wonder and come to the decision "We need to ban more!! We banned all of this plastic, and th eproblem hasn't gone away! Make all plastics illegal - you can't have plastic pollution if th

    • Why doesn't America just shoot half the population. I mean that would have a bigger net positive impact on the environment than your suggestion so let's go with that.

      Oh...hold on..... No it won't. Because the EU isn't the problem, and the USA isn't the problem.

      Indians shit on the street. Which means it's okay for you to go an shit in the street. After all it's Indias fault. We all live on our own little earth and me throwing a plastic cup on the ground is okay because someone else did it too. waaaaahhhhh.

      I take it you're a Trump voter. No that wasn't a question.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      The EU introduced RoHS that limited things like the use of leaded solder in consumer products. People would have moaned about "virtue signalling" but the term hadn't been invented back then.

      What actually happened is that the rest of the world basically adopted RoHS since it made more sense to build one product for every market than to make a special one for the EU. The lives of people everywhere were improved because the electronics they were buying had less lead and other hazardous substances in them, even

      • The EU introduced RoHS that limited things like the use of leaded solder in consumer products. People would have moaned about "virtue signalling" but the term hadn't been invented back then.

        What actually happened is that the rest of the world basically adopted RoHS since it made more sense to build one product for every market than to make a special one for the EU.

        And yet, for critical systems, Tin lead or silver tin lead are still in use. The solders that don't contain lead have an issue with something called Tin Whiskers. And it affected a lot of electronics. Here's a listing of the EU's improvements with their new solder formulations https://nepp.nasa.gov/WHISKER/... [nasa.gov].

        The lives of people everywhere were improved because the electronics they were buying had less lead and other hazardous substances in them, even though it was an EU rule.

        Do you have the citations of solder creating health problems? It's a cool story bro, but responsible recycling is the answer, not creating more problems.

        Your welcome.

        I'll say thank you when the EU pays for al

  • Cutting brownies is impossible without plastic knives.

  • Yep, I love this idea. Plastic has creeped into everything. My mom recently told me when she was a kid, there were few fast food places, but you could stop by certain places with delis. The delis would give you a glass to go plate... I take it you'd recycle the glass later.

  • Plastic straws/knives/plates/etc. make up a tiny portion of plastic waste. Europe (and the US) make up a tiny portion of ocean plastic waste. Almost all is from Asia and Africa.

    So the net change to this is near zero. This is all virtue signaling and will have no real change to pollution.

    Meanwhile, it will inconvenience hundreds of millions of people.

    Absolute bovine excrement.

    • Meanwhile, it will inconvenience hundreds of millions of people.

      Well, that's certainly the most important thing, isn't it? "Convenience". You must be American. I've only heard Americans spouting, "I don't want to help save our environment because it will inconvenience me." Jesus Christ, that's a level of selfishness that you must be proud of.
  • They banned plastic stuff in my part of California, and I have to tell you, nothing has changed except less wasted plastic. When you go to a restaurant or fast food, instead of dropping a straw in front of you that you ignore and ends up in the trash, you have to actually say, "I'll take a straw, please" (and the please is only required if you happened to have been raised right, which leaves out Trump voters, but to be honest, we leave out Trump voters generally here in California). It's absolutely no big

  • Then...

    Frexit
    Grexit
    Itexit
    Spexit

    etc...

  • Use glass.
    It can be recycled infinitely, and if you want you can reuse the bottles and plates.
  • Where will you get red Solo cups? Perhaps you can import them...

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