This article is part of our special report Plastics Recycling.

SPECIAL REPORT / The European Union’s lead civil servant for the environment has called for a ban on landfilling and warned that separate collection is not enough if the EU is to improve its environmental performance.

“Separate collection is very much at the heart of this circular economy … [but] we are coming to realise that separate collection is not enough,” said Karl Falkenberg, the European Commission’s director-general for environment, at a conference in Brussels on Tuesday (29 April).

Falkenberg, speaking at the event hosted by TEPPFA, the European plastic pipes and fittings association, added that an EU-wide ban on landfilling would provide “security for recyclers”. The event was the first satellite event before Green Week, an annual conference on European environmental policy, which is to take place from 3 to 5 June, in Brussels.

This would encourage re-use or material recycling, or encourage waste management companies to transform waste into energy, through incineration.

“We need to close the easy door to landfilling,” he said, emphasising the environmental damage and human health risks posed by this form of waste management.

“China is maybe the best demonstration of the environmental cost of our way of producing. How do we ensure that our air remains reasonably clear, that our drinking water is not making anyone sick? All of this makes real sense,” he said.

Plastic: ‘fantastic’ but ‘drastic’

Falkenberg’s directorate has focused much of its work on plastic, which has been referred to by the EU’s environment commissioner, Janez Poto?nik, as both “fantastic”, due to its adaptability, but “drastic”, due to its environmental impact.

Last year the directorate carried out a public consultation on plastic waste, in which respondents called for greater collection and recycling rates and a ban on landfilling. Regulation is expected this year.

“Plastic is one of those materials that can be recycled over and over again. Streams in which we collect need to be organised for recycling,” said Falkenberg, also issuing a call to plastic producers to be careful that the materials that they use are amenable to recycling and do not pose a health risk.

The environment directorate is expected to release a target of 70% plastic recycling by 2020.

“We want clear messages that this is the direction that society is moving”, Falkenberg said, adding that this would allow “sound investment decisions”. “Those are the broad lines we are trying to develop for our circular economy,” he added.

Members of the plastic industry called for a regulatory framework that was “supportive rather than restrictive” of this goal.