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Valencia Citizens Take Active Role in PlastiCircle Innovations

5 November 2018

The neighbourhood of San Marcelino (Sant Marcel-lí) in Valencia, Spain, has hosted an interactive workshop on better recycling of urban waste – part of a PlastiCircle initiative to boost local participation in the project’s many innovations.

On 23 October 2018, more than 30 people who live or work in the San Marcelino area linked up with PlastiCircle to contribute ideas on better waste separation and recycling in the neighbourhood.

San Marcelino will be the first of three European pilot neighbourhoods for the PlastiCircle project, so the consortium is eager to hear how citizens are separating their waste, and what ideas they have for the innovative ‘smart containers’ PlastiCircle is developing to collect plastic waste before it is transported from the area for further sorting and recycling.

At the workshop, citizens called for a more inclusive process in the design of PlastiCircle’s plastic waste containers, to better reflect the needs of the community. Neighbourhood representatives also echoed project leaders’ calls for economic incentives to encourage recycling. These aspects are intended to be fully integrated into the PlastiCircle project – not only in Valencia, but also in the other pilot sites in Alba Iulia in Romania, and Utrecht in the Netherlands.

Local people firmly welcomed the arrival of PlastiCircle in the neighbourhood, saying the project was both “positive and necessary” to improve recycling processes there. But citizens admitted that ignorance of good waste separation practices was hampering efforts in the community.

To combat this, the workshop’s various working groups were clear on the need to invest more time and resources in training citizens, with a special emphasis on dissemination of knowledge within colleges and educational institutes.

“It’s important that citizens are aware of the issues faced by public administrations, and vice versa; putting ourselves in others’ shoes helps us come to a consensus,” said Natalia García from workshop co-organiser SOSTRE.

But waste separation was only one aspect addressed by the workshop. During discussions, working groups were also set up to look at plastic waste containers and citizen reward systems for good separation.

Such incentives might include reductions in various public administration fees, direct discounts at shops in the neighborhood, discounts for municipal public transport or leisure services, and cut-price cinema or theatre tickets.

Workshop participants also had ideas for boosting overall citizen participation in the pilot, especially with smart solutions. Personal ID cards and the use of mobile applications to consult waste collection points could identify those who recycle most often, so they can then benefit from incentives and rewards.

Organised by PlastiCircle partner Las Naves and SOSTRE, the workshop was part of a series of events under the auspices of Valencia Canvia Pel Clima.

“What we want is to make plastics circular,” environment chief tells World Circular Economy Forum

23 October 2018

Some 95 per cent of the value of plastics is lost to the economy each year because Europe is not reusing or recycling enough, an international audience heard today in Japan.

Today at the World Circular Economy Forum in Japan, a global audience of experts, business leaders and policy makers heard that in the European Union (EU), 105 billion euros of value is lost each year due to a lack of plastics reuse and recycling – some 95 per cent of the value of plastics in the EU.

Daniel Calleja, director general of the European Commission’s DG Environment, told a packed session in Yokohama that plastic reuse and recycling rates in the bloc remain stubbornly low compared with other materials, but that the EU institutions continue to tackle the issue head on.

“The plastics sector in the EU is a very strategic sector,” Mr Calleja told the forum’s session on Circular Economy for Plastics.

“The sector employs 1.5 million people and has a turnover of 340 billion euros, but plastic is also at the origin of serious environmental issues,” he said, adding that in the EU and beyond, decision makers are exploring ways to make the plastic sector circular, save resources and “reduce plastic leakage into the environment”.

According to the European Commission, 25.8 million tonnes of plastic waste is generated annually in the EU, with less than 30 per cent collected adequately.

For its part, the European Commission has recently introduced a raft of proposals and concrete legislation in recent months to address the plastics challenge within and outwith the bloc.

In January 2018, the EU adopted a Plastics Strategy to ensure that by 2030, all plastic packaging put into the market is reusable or recyclable. Plastic packaging comprises the largest type of plastic waste in the EU.

Mr Calleja also told the forum that single-use plastics would be restricted where there are no alternatives, and that a “restriction dossier” was being prepared for micro-plastics that are intentionally added in products. “We are taking regulatory action at the European level,” said Mr Calleja, “but also at the level of the G7, G20 and within the United Nations to combat plastic pollution. Only international efforts will be able to deliver.”

The environmental policy chief added that innovation would be a key tool in delivering circularity for the European plastics sector – with heavy investment to follow.

“In the coming years we are spending more than 350 million euros in order to promote innovative solutions linked to plastics. We’ll be looking at design and circularity. We do not want to demonise plastics; what we want is to make plastics circular, to make sure we can recycle and reuse them.”

Mr Calleja’s comments echoed those of other international participants in today’s session, all keen to emphasise the link of smart product designs to improving circularity in the sector.

“In Germany we have good collection and sorting systems but this is not enough,” said German environment ministry speaker Regina Dube. “We should also improve packaging design to get to a circular economy.”

In the Europe, the EU’s innovation drive is notably being supported by the bloc’s research and innovation agenda, and the Horizon 2020 programme.

Multi-million euro initiatives including the CIRC-PACK and PlastiCircle projects are being driven forward to improve the circularity of plastic packaging, promote innovations in collection and sorting and boost the production of added value products from recycled plastic packaging waste.

With global plastics production set to double in the next 20 years, the need for regulation, partnerships with the private sector, and strategic investment in circular economy solutions is becoming ever more urgent.

Today's session at the World Circular Economy Forum was co-organised by the Japanese Ministry for the Environment, the Finnish innovation fund Sitra, and the European Commission.

Could Innovative Plastics be in Line for Procurement Boost in Europe?

9 October 2018

On 3-5 October 2018, the PlastiCircle project was present at the EcoProcura conference for public procurement and innovation professionals from around Europe.

Projects such as PlastiCircle and CIRC-PACK, another Horizon 2020 project aiming for a circular economy for plastic packaging, were represented among a clutch of circular economy experts looking to assess future opportunities for future innovative products, including high-quality recycled and bio-based plastics.

EcoProcura, held in Nijmegen in the Netherlands, was a timely reminder that public procurement accounts for some 14 per cent of GDP in the European Union, and as such represents a sizeable potential market for materials with sound environmental credentials.

According to Dr John Watt, sustainable economy and procurement officer at ICLEI – Local Governments for Sustainability, public procurement could have an “important role” in enabling the transition from single-use plastic and fossil resource-based plastics – currently an imperative at the European level.

“In addition to packaging, plastics are used extensively for products in sectors such as furniture, electronics and construction,” added Dr Watt.

“If public authorities set procurement requirements for plastics to include an amount of recycled and bio-based content, it would help boost the market demand for such solutions.”

The pan-European PlastiCircle project, which aims to develop new added-value, recycled plastic products for the market, will continue to monitor developments in public procurement at the European level.

Europe’s Towns and Cities in Line for CIRC-PACK Benefits

2 October 2018

Europe’s towns and cities stand to make real gains from new knowledge and innovations in plastic packaging, according to CIRCE’s Montserrat Lanero in a new interview.

Montserrat Lanero, project manager for the CIRC-PACK project and at Zaragoza-based research centre CIRCE, has told circpack.eu that local authorities across Europe could benefit long-term from knowledge transfer and key recommendations that CIRC-PACK will produce for municipalities.

As part of the European Union’s circular economy objectives, the CIRC-PACK project is applying new innovations to plastic packaging design (to improve sorting and recycling), and for the production of new bio-based, biodegradable plastics from renewable resources – as opposed to finite fossil fuels. It is hoped the innovations will ‘close the loop’ on plastics in the environment, and go some way to alleviating Europe’s plastic problem.

Ms Lanero said that across Europe, local authorities with low rates of recovery of plastic waste – and especially plastic packaging – had become an issue, but projects like CIRC-PACK “could help through knowledge transfer”, boost recovery and recycling rates, and raise awareness of circular economy principles.

“In terms of the environmental impact of plastic packaging, CIRC-PACK can really increase awareness among consumers in Europe’s towns and cities, but also among local authorities and public administrations,” said Ms Lanero.

“These actors could certainly benefit from project recommendations and enhance their current policies on plastic packaging.”

Each year in the European Union, more than 25 million tonnes of plastic waste are produced by EU member countries – the majority of which is plastic packaging. Less than a third of plastic waste is recycled.

Asked what consumers could expect from projects such as CIRC-PACK, Ms Lanero said that the advent of biodegradable plastic materials, made from bio-based renewable resources, would prove crucial.

“With CIRC-PACK, we have been collaborating with consumers since the very beginning of the project to take into account their expectations of future products and what they want to see from us and other actors in the ‘lower impact’ packaging market.”

“In the end, we will have more useful materials and better quality materials. This is key for consumers and the environment.”

Among multiple European initiatives to close the loop on plastics, CIRC-PACK is a three-year initiative funded by the EU’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme.

The project aims to transform the plastic packaging value chain from a linear to a circular value chain, and transform waste to resource by producing new added-value products for a range of sectors (such as the automotive and hygienic product sectors).

The full interview with Ms Lanero is online.