Thank you for contacting me about plastic pollution.
The Resources and Waste Strategy for
England sets out the Government’s plans to reduce, reuse, and recycle more
plastic and Ministers have committed to work towards all plastic packaging
on the market being recyclable or reusable by 2025.
Significant progress has already been
made to address plastic pollution, including a ban on microbeads and
restricting the supply of plastic straws, plastic drink stirrers, and
plastic-stemmed cotton buds. The use of single-use carrier
bags in supermarkets has reduced by over 98 per cent.
Further, restrictions on a range of
single-use plastics, including plastic plates, trays, bowls, cutlery, balloon
sticks and certain types of polystyrene cups and food containers have now come
into force. I understand that England uses 2.7 billion items of single-use
cutlery and over 700 million single-use plates per year, but only 10 per cent
are recycled. This new ban is the next step in cracking down on harmful plastic
waste.
Through the Environment Act 2021, the
Government has set a target is to halve residual waste by 2042. This
refers to waste that is sent to landfill, put through incineration, or used in
energy recovery in the UK or overseas. This is an intentionally broad target,
which will include the most environmentally harmful materials like plastics,
rather than banning a single type of material and risk producers moving to a
different, more harmful material.
Thank you again for taking the time to
contact me.
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