Coalition Call to Support Binding Recycled Content Targets in Beverage Bottles

29 November 2018


We, the co-signatories of this joint statement, urge the Council to support the binding target of at least 35% recycled plastic in beverage bottles by 2025.

This target voted by the European Parliament on 24 October is instrumental in the achievement of the objectives of the Single Use Plastics (SUP) Directive and in igniting the much supported transition towards a more circular economy. It would be a historical step, correcting a much overdue market failure to not value recycled material more while unlocking much needed investment in collection and recycling.

Under the framework of the SUP Directive, the amendment adopted by the European Parliament setting a 35% target of recycled plastic content in beverage bottles by 2025 is a vital, and absolutely achievable, step towards circularity.

Of the 25.8 million tonnes of plastic waste generated in Europe every year, less than 30% of such waste is collected for recycling. Demand for recycled plastics today accounts for only around 6% of plastics demand in Europe. Among the numerous negative impacts, failing to collect plastic waste directly contributes to the loss of valuable resources, leaving Europe in a vulnerable position, unable to meet demand without sufficient flows of input materials. 

Setting a mandatory recycled plastic target for beverage bottles, where food safety considerations are fully complied with, will immediately have positive knock-on effects on improving and increasing the collection rate of these SUP and is hence vital in achieving the 90% collection target set by the Proposal.

The minimum target of 35% for recycled plastic in beverage bottles voted by the European Parliament is a key contributor, as acknowledged in the report, for the creation of a steady market for recyclates, and will ensure a more circular use of plastics. Together with the need to better design packaging items so that they are fully recyclable, this recycled content target will send the strong signals needed.

Until now, no measures have been taken at the EU level to pull the demand for recycled materials and complete the second half of the cycle in a more circular economy, unfortunately an unfulfilled ambition of the revised waste package. Over the last decades, European legislation has predominantly focused on the (waste) supply side by setting collection and recycling targets, if we aim to increase plastics recycling further that will not be enough going forward. 

This proposal is a monumental change and is vital in the making of a more circular EU legislation.
Please do not waste it!



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