Reinventing plastics in Europe and around the world

26 October 2017

“Plastics is everywhere, we know that,” said Werner Bosmans, Coordinator Plastics Strategy of European Commission, DG Environment. Bosmans painted a bleak picture for attendees here in Barcelona at “Sustainability In Packaging Europe 2017,” hosted by Smithers Pira.

“Today we have 20% more plastic than we did a half century ago,” Bosmans continued. “What is amazing is the growth still to come, an 80-fold increase in less than a century. Exponential growth from 314 million tons in 2014 to 1,200 million tons in 2050.

According to Bosmans, in the EU, plastic packaging is the most important sector and accounts for 40 percent of production. The EU has a much better record of dealing with plastic waste than the U.S. with 30 percent of collected plastics recycled, 39 percent incinerated and 31 percent landfilled.

“The problem is,” he said, “is that plastic is far too valuable a resource to be burned or buried.”

“There are also a lot of different kinds of plastics,” according to Bosmans, “and many need an individual solution.”

Biomass has some potential here is Europe, “but we cannot make the same mistakes, they are not a solution for everything,” he said. “They can help,” he said, “and it is a growing category.”

Those traveling to Africa report seeing plastic waste everywhere. But the ocean is the real, most visible problem. “Thirteen million tons of plastic waste ends up in the ocean every year,” says Bosmans, “mostly in Southeast Asia.”

“We need to stop plastics from entering the sea,” said Bosmans, “then clean up our oceans. And with most sinking to the bottom, it won’t be an easy clean up.”

Microplastics, those intentionally added to products, as well as those generated during the lifecycle of a product, are a particular problem posing a threat to both humans and animals.

Biodegradability is also not a simple solution. “Markings on packages often confuse consumers and you end up with normal plastic entering the organic waste stream” he said.

“Yes, they are cheap and disposable,” Bosmans challenged the audience, “but single use plastic products are no longer viable. Plastic cotton swabs, for instance, found all over beaches in Europe, are made with paper or wood in other parts of the globe. Sometimes plastic is not the best solution.”

“Design is the first step,” said Bosmans. “Before you develop a product or a package, you have to take into account substances of concern that complicate recycling.”

“Appearances, for instance, vital in the role packaging plays to a brand,” he said, “don’t matter for insulation inside your walls.”

“There is a key role here for innovation and investment,” Bosmans told the crowd. “if Europe gets it right, the world will follow.”

Bosmans outlined the Eurpean Commission’s plans to increase recycling and reduce leakage into the environment. “Linear plastic is out,” said Bosmans, circular is in.”

 

Source:packworld.com