So here's a bit about what I do for a living. I'm an environmental consultant and I specialise in management systems and waste management. In March Defra has made changes to the Extended Producer Responsibility Scheme. It places greater responsibility on producers of goods needing packaging. It ends up as waste and we, the people, currently pay for it to be collected and dealt with. Now the EPR means that companies must track their packaging and account for it and pay for the waste they put out as packaging. The EPR therefore outlines ways to save on materials, what to use that is easier to recycle and how to avoid waste packaging. It's back on them now. It should NEVER have been down to the individual to save the planet one bottle at a time - the great corporate con! Now, at least companies in England and Wales will be paying for their crap, and not us. #extendedproducerresponsibilityscheme #ukwaste #packagingwaste #reducingwasteatsource #producerpays

@Susan60 @ernandy which begs the question; why is it legal for the producers of those single-use-plastic sachets (Unilever, a huge multi-national company) are allowed to sell them in countries that don’t have the waste management infrastructure to deal with it https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/aug/01/how-unilever-plastic-sachets-became-a-toxic-scourge-oceans

#BoycotUnilever #PlasticWaste #ProducerPays

Single servings at low prices: how Unilever’s sachets became an environmental scourge

Plastic in the Depths: Multinational denies dropping plan to recycle plastic sachets – and leaving developing countries with a toxic headache as they end up in landfill or the ocean

The Guardian