Keep Scotland Beautiful Local Environmental Quality ...1. Prototype a Common Litter Measurement &...
Transcript of Keep Scotland Beautiful Local Environmental Quality ...1. Prototype a Common Litter Measurement &...
Keep Scotland BeautifulLocal Environmental Quality Conference 2016, Glasgow
Eamonn BatesSecretary General
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
The Clean Europe Network• Launched in March 2013 with EU Commissioner for Environment, Janez Potočnik
• Currently reaches 20 million European citizens
a joint platform of Fost Plus and
OVAM
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
Vision and Mission
A litter free Europe by 2030
Reached by
Changing behaviour and reducing litter at all levels within Europe
Stimulating greater litter prevention activity - focusing particularly on younger generations
Encouraging the application of greater resources to this end in EU Member States and across wider Europe
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
What we do
EU policy-makers
• Make available
balanced factual
information about
litter prevention
Within our organisation
• Share know-how and pool
expertise, best practice and
research, drawing on
experience of national
organisations
• Develop common
programmes/methodologies
in areas where there is added-
value in a European approach
Towards other NGOs
• Provide technical
assistance to newcomers to
the litter prevention field
Towards businesses
• Provide businesses with
opportunities to
collaborate with or
support the Network
Main objective: enhance the effectiveness of litter prevention structures/initiatives around Europe
All stakeholders
• Provide a forum for
public discussion of
the litter challenge at
international level,
notably for businesses,
decision-makers and
other stakeholders
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
Key achievements to dateWork Programme co-funded by the EU LIFE+ NGO Operating Grant scheme
1. Prototype a Common Litter Measurement & Monitoring Methodology to enable, in due course, comparable pan-European data on litter/littering. Pre-piloted 2015, full pilotingin 2016.
2. Development of best practice guides on: a) communicating to citizens about litter prevention and b) involving businesses in litter prevention campaigns. Available for download off ourwebsite in 6 EU languages.
3. Feasibility study on Litter Pathways to the AquaticEnvironment, containing a toolkit to help local authoritiesidentify local sources of litter getting into local lakes, rivers, canals, etc. and an approach to abatement. Prepiloting in 2016.
4. Caught the attention of the European institutions on the best approach to litter prevention. Proposed waste directive includes shared responsibilty for litter and prevention of littering.
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
Key achievements to date
5. Coordinators in Clean Up Europe Day 2014 & 2015: over 1000 litter clean up actions each time involving 38,000 volunteers across Europe. Next edition 6-8 May 2016.
6. Website (in 6 EU languages) to share best practice and otherresources for those interested in working on litter preventionaround the EU. www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
7. Creation of a database of EU level stakeholders related to litterprevention matters.
8. First ever European “Stop Litter Now! Summit”
Stop Litter Now! Summit 2014
The first ever pan-European eventon litter prevention
Stakeholders from across the EU
Opportunity to showcase the WorkProgramme of the Clean Europe Network.
• Around 120 participants, 23 speakers
• 2 days of activity around litter prevention• Networking with experts, local
authorities, NGOs, business representatives
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
Eamonn Bates, Clean Europe NetworkSecretary General
The “rising tide” of litter at EU level
Litter: EU level policy drivers
• Marine litter crisis
• Commission plastics waste in environment report
• Italy: ban of plastics carrier bags
• 1st Let’s Clean Up Europe Day
• European Commission legalises Italian ban
2010
Litter: EU level policy drivers
• European Parliament and Member States toughen bags ban
• Circular Economy Package
• EPR for litter in proposed Waste Directive
• The Netherlands: debate on extension of deposit return scheme to smaller beverage containers to fight litter
Litter: EU level policy drivers
• France: ban of plastics carrier bags…
• … and of disposable tableware
• Germany: Berlin cup tax rumours created a debate
• UK: expert consulting team advocates a range of measures to stop litter
• UK & Belgium: consider deposit-return for small PET bottles and cans to fight litter
2015
Litter: EU level policy drivers
• G7 in Berlin: reduce marine litter by 50% by 2025
• G7: restrict packaging and single use items on land
• Belgium: the three federal regions consider a national Deposit-Return Scheme for beverage cans and PET bottles
• Netherlands: Deposit Return Scheme shelved, pending results of a new industry-funded prevention scheme for schools and clubs
Litter: EU level policy drivers
• December 2015: new Circular Economy Package
• December 2015: new proposed Waste Directive shared responsibility for litter with EPR for litter prevention communications
• 2016: Belgium “mothballs” DRS proposal in favourof a €17 million annual litter prevention programme paid for by industry
• France notifies its ban on traditional “disposable tableware” to the European Commission
2016/2017
A Circular Economy for Europe
• 2 December 2015: the European Commission presented:
• A comprehensive plan for reform to promote a circular economy in the EU
• envisages a series of specific initiatives in the near future
• relevance/impact on litter & littering unsure
• A set of legislative proposals to update EU waste laws
• on the table right now
• comprehensive coverage of litter/littering
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
Shared responsibility for litter
• EU member states to take responsibility for addressing littering and litter in their policies and programmes and to take steps to make sure citizens respect the rules;
• producers to take responsibility for communicating litter prevention information to citizens;
• EU citizens to take their personal responsibility of not dropping litter, or potentially face legal consequences.
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
Member State responsibility
• obliges member state governments to develop litter prevention strategies in their national waste management plans
• prepared periodically and shared with Brussels• national plans must “combat all forms of littering and clean-
up all types of litter” (that could include, for example, tobacco waste, chewing gum, packaging, newspapers and magazines, tissue paper, and others)
• Commission will facilitate exchange of expertise and best practice at EU level
• Significantly, it is also proposing an obligation on all member states to prohibit littering and apply appropriate penalties on those who break the law.
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
Producer responsibility
• Producers whose products frequently end up as litter, take on a clear responsibility to communicate to the users or consumers of their products about litter prevention.
• Obligation implemented in practice via the so-called “producer responsibility organisations” (set up by producers in the member states) to manage collectively the individual responsibility of companies to guarantee appropriate collection and waste management of their products once they have been used
• Tobacco, gum, newspapers, tissue, etc. need to be included somehow…
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
Citizen responsibility
• EU law will make littering an offence everywhere, with the possibility of consequent sanctions.
• On the other hand, incentive systems may be introduced that will be directed at them in the name of litter prevention, to encourage less littering and more recycling.
• In plain language, we interpret this to mean the Commission encourages consideration of charges, taxes and potentially even restrictions by member state authorities.
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
Shared responsibility: product coverage
• the requirement on member states to take “measures to combat all forms of littering and clean up all types of litter” will in practice mean that the obligations to be placed on product groups already served by producer responsibility organisations (notably, packaging) will also have to be extended to product groups like tobacco, chewing gum, newspapers & magazines, paper handkerchiefs and others, all of which are frequently dropped as litter.
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
Shared responsibility: product coverage
• the requirement on member states to take “measures to combat all forms of littering and clean up all types of litter” will in practice mean that the obligations to be placed on product groups already served by producer responsibility organisations (notably, packaging) will also have to be extended to product groups like tobacco, chewing gum, newspapers & magazines, paper handkerchiefs and others, all of which are frequently dropped as litter.
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
EU
institutions
EU
institutions
European Commission
EuropeanCouncil
EuropeanParliament
Council of Ministers
EUtriangle of
negotiation
EU Institutional Players
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
ENVIRONMENT COMMITTEEINDUSTRY COMMITTEEKey spokesperson:Simona Bonafè, MEP (IT – Socialist)
COUNCIL OF ENVIRONMENT MININSTERSWORKING PARTYKey conveners over next 18 months:Netherlands, Slovakia, Malta, (UK?)
DIRECTORATE GENERAL ENVIRONMENTKey arbiter over next 18 months:Commissioner Vella and his Waste Unit
Timing
• European Parliament
• Bonafè Report and amendments 21 April 2016
• Environment Committee debate June 2016
• Input from Industry Committee
• MEP amendments in Environment Committee July 2016
• Committee Vote September
• Council of Ministers
• Working Party already reviewing proposals
• No conclusions under Dutch presidency
• Consensus towards year-end?
• Inter-institutional negotiations
• end-2016, first half of 2017 agreement mid-2017?
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
Timing
• Pan-European shared responsibility for litter could be a reality on the ground in 2018/2019
• Including an obligation on producers – all producers – to take a share of the responsibility
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
The Clean Europe Network• Launched in March 2013 with EU Commissioner for Environment, Janez Potočnik
• Currently reaches 20 million European citizens
a joint platform of Fost Plus and
OVAM
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
Vision and Mission
A litter free Europe by 2030
Reached by
Changing behaviour and reducing litter at all levels within Europe
Stimulating greater litter prevention activity - focusing particularly on younger generations
Encouraging the application of greater resources to this end in EU Member States and across wider Europe
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
What we do
EU policy-makers
• Make available
balanced factual
information about litter
prevention
Within our organisation
• Share know-how and pool
expertise, best practice and
research, drawing on
experience of national
organisations
• Develop common
programmes/methodologies
in areas where there is added-
value in a European approach
Towards other NGOs
• Provide technical
assistance to newcomers to
the litter prevention field
Towards businesses
• Provide businesses with
opportunities to
collaborate with or
support the Network
Main objective: enhance the effectiveness of litter prevention structures/initiatives around Europe
All stakeholders
• Provide a forum for
public discussion of
the litter challenge at
international level,
notably for businesses,
decision-makers and
other stakeholderswww.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
Key achievements to dateWork Programme co-funded by the EU LIFE+ NGO Operating Grant scheme
1. Prototype a Common Litter Measurement & Monitoring Methodology to enable, in due course, comparable pan-European data on litter/littering. Pre-piloted 2015, full pilotingin 2016.
2. Development of best practice guides on: a) communicating to citizens about litter prevention and b) involving businesses in litter prevention campaigns. Available for download off ourwebsite in 6 EU languages.
3. Feasibility study on Litter Pathways to the AquaticEnvironment, containing a toolkit to help local authoritiesidentify local sources of litter getting into local lakes, rivers, canals, etc. and an approach to abatement. Prepiloting in 2016.
4. Caught the attention of the European institutions on the best approach to litter prevention. Proposed waste directive includes shared responsibilty for litter and prevention of littering.
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
Key achievements to date
5. Coordinators in Clean Up Europe Day 2014 & 2015: over 1000 litter clean up actions each time involving 38,000 volunteers across Europe. Next edition 6-8 May 2016.
6. Website (in 6 EU languages) to share best practice and otherresources for those interested in working on litter preventionaround the EU. www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
7. Creation of a database of EU level stakeholders related to litterprevention matters.
8. First ever European “Stop Litter Now! Summit”
Stop Litter Now! Summit 2014
The first ever pan-European event on litter prevention
Stakeholders from across the EU
Opportunity to showcase the WorkProgramme of the Clean Europe Network.
• Around 120 participants, 23 speakers
• 2 days of activity around litter prevention• Networking with experts, local
authorities, NGOs, business representatives
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
Eamonn Bates, Clean Europe NetworkSecretary General
The “rising tide” of litter at EU level
Litter: EU level policy drivers
• Marine litter crisis
• Commission plastics waste in environment report
• Italy: ban of plastics carrier bags
• 1st Let’s Clean Up Europe Day
• European Commission legalises Italian ban
2010
Litter: EU level policy drivers
• European Parliament and Member States toughen bags ban
• Circular Economy Package
• EPR for litter in proposed Waste Directive
• The Netherlands: debate on extension of deposit return scheme to smaller beverage containers to fight litter
Litter: EU level policy drivers
• France: ban of plastics carrier bags…
• … and of disposable tableware
• Germany: Berlin cup tax rumours created a debate
• UK: expert consulting team advocates a range of measures to stop litter
• UK & Belgium: consider deposit-return for small PET bottles and cans to fight litter
2015
Litter: EU level policy drivers
• G7 in Berlin: reduce marine litter by 50% by 2025
• G7: restrict packaging and single use items on land
• Belgium: the three federal regions consider a national Deposit-Return Scheme for beverage cans and PET bottles
• Netherlands: Deposit Return Scheme shelved, pending results of a new industry-funded prevention scheme for schools and clubs
Litter: EU level policy drivers
• December 2015: new Circular Economy Package
• December 2015: new proposed Waste Directive shared responsibility for litter with EPR for litter prevention communications
• 2016: Belgium “mothballs” DRS proposal in favourof a €17 million annual litter prevention programmepaid for by industry
• France notifies its ban on traditional “disposable tableware” to the European Commission
2016/2017
A Circular Economy for Europe
• 2 December 2015: the European Commission presented:
• A comprehensive plan for reform to promote a circular economy in the EU
• envisages a series of specific initiatives in the near future
• relevance/impact on litter & littering unsure
• A set of legislative proposals to update EU waste laws
• on the table right now
• comprehensive coverage of litter/littering
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
Shared responsibility for litter
• EU member states to take responsibility for addressing littering and litter in their policies and programmes and to take steps to make sure citizens respect the rules;
• producers to take responsibility for communicating litter prevention information to citizens;
• EU citizens to take their personal responsibility of not dropping litter, or potentially face legal consequences.
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
Member State responsibility
• obliges member state governments to develop litter prevention strategies in their national waste management plans
• prepared periodically and shared with Brussels• national plans must “combat all forms of littering and clean-up
all types of litter” (that could include, for example, tobacco waste, chewing gum, packaging, newspapers and magazines, tissue paper, and others)
• Commission will facilitate exchange of expertise and best practice at EU level
• Significantly, it is also proposing an obligation on all member states to prohibit littering and apply appropriate penalties on those who break the law.
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
Producer responsibility
• Producers whose products frequently end up as litter, take on a clear responsibility to communicate to the users or consumers of their products about litter prevention.
• Obligation implemented in practice via the so-called “producer responsibility organisations” (set up by producers in the member states) to manage collectively the individual responsibility of companies to guarantee appropriate collection and waste management of their products once they have been used
• Tobacco, gum, newspapers, tissue, etc. need to be included somehow…
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
Citizen responsibility
• EU law will make littering an offence everywhere, with the possibility of consequent sanctions.
• On the other hand, incentive systems may be introduced that will be directed at them in the name of litter prevention, to encourage less littering and more recycling.
• In plain language, we interpret this to mean the Commission encourages consideration of charges, taxes and potentially even restrictions by member state authorities.
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
Shared responsibility: product coverage
• the requirement on member states to take “measures to combat all forms of littering and clean up all types of litter” will in practice mean that the obligations to be placed on product groups already served by producer responsibility organisations (notably, packaging) will also have to be extended to product groups like tobacco, chewing gum, newspapers & magazines, paper handkerchiefs and others, all of which are frequently dropped as litter.
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
Shared responsibility: product coverage
• the requirement on member states to take “measures to combat all forms of littering and clean up all types of litter” will in practice mean that the obligations to be placed on product groups already served by producer responsibility organisations (notably, packaging) will also have to be extended to product groups like tobacco, chewing gum, newspapers & magazines, paper handkerchiefs and others, all of which are frequently dropped as litter.
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
EU
institutions
EU
institutions
European Commission
EuropeanCouncil
EuropeanParliament
Council of Ministers
EUtriangle of
negotiation
EU Institutional Players
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
ENVIRONMENT COMMITTEEINDUSTRY COMMITTEEKey spokesperson:Simona Bonafè, MEP (IT – Socialist)
COUNCIL OF ENVIRONMENT MININSTERSWORKING PARTYKey conveners over next 18 months:Netherlands, Slovakia, Malta, (UK?)
DIRECTORATE GENERAL ENVIRONMENTKey arbiter over next 18 months:Commissioner Vella and his Waste Unit
Timing
• European Parliament
• Bonafè Report and amendments 21 April 2016
• Environment Committee debate June 2016
• Input from Industry Committee
• MEP amendments in Environment Committee July 2016
• Committee Vote September
• Council of Ministers
• Working Party already reviewing proposals
• No conclusions under Dutch presidency
• Consensus towards year-end?
• Inter-institutional negotiations
• end-2016, first half of 2017 agreement mid-2017?www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu
Timing
• Pan-European shared responsibility for litter could be a reality on the ground in 2018/2019
• Including an obligation on producers – all producers – to take a share of the responsibility
www.cleaneuropenetwork.eu