Denmark to Tax Packaging Based on Eco-Impact
Wesley Roe and Marjorie Lakin Erickson
lakinroe at silcom.com
Tue Aug 22 08:31:30 PDT 2000
Denmark to Tax Packaging Based on
Eco-Impact
COPENHAGEN, Denmark, August 21, 2000 (ENS) - In
what it claims
to be a world first, the Danish environmental
protection agency (EPA)
has proposed differentiating existing taxes on
packaging materials by
their environmental impacts.
Based on a new life cycle assessment, the agency
said on Tuesday
that relatively low taxes should apply to paper,
cardboard and glass,
and much higher ones to aluminium, expanded
polystyrene and
polyvinyl chloride (PVC).
The life cycle assessment and associated
political interpretation of its
results have been prepared in advance of an
expected government
proposal to revise Denmark's current packaging
tax system. This is
likely to emerge before the end of the year,
with the EPA's proposal
now out to receive public comments until
September 12.
Introduced in
January 1999,
the current
system is weight
based. Tax
rates per
kilogram vary
between
materials, but
in such a way
that the rate
for all
materials
averages about
DKr0.31
(US$.04) per litre of
goods delivered.
Packaging used
in 17
product groups is covered, ranging from wine and
vinegar, to edible
oils, food sauces, milk, margarine, dog and cat
foods, lubricants,
pesticides, and paints.
Neither the existing system nor the new proposal
affects the existing
volume based tax system for carbonated drinks.
The Danish government has indicated that it
wants to differentiate
packaging taxes depending on environmental
impacts but has yet to
endorse the EPA's plan.
The agency stresses that its proposal would
continue to favor lower
overall use of packaging, but would also supply
incentives to use
greener alternative packaging materials where
feasible.
The main surprise to have come out of the new
life cycle assessment
was how badly aluminium scored, a spokesperson
said. Aluminum is at
the top of the new tax list while glass, paper
and wood packaging
would be taxed the least.
Meanwhile in Berlin, the German environment
agency is urging
consumers to buy drinks in refillable
polyethylene terephthalate (PET)
plastic packaging and to boycott metal cans and
one way glass
bottles after a life cycle assessment published
last week concluded
that refillable PET bottles are the best
environmental option, followed
by cartons and refillable glass, all of which
are preferable to metal
cans and one way glass bottles.
Bales of plastic drink
containers ready for
recycling
The analysis was
carried out, in
accordance with the
international standard
14040, by an
economics institute, an
environment institute
and a packaging market
research organisation.
All containers with a
market share of at
least five percent in
1996 were included.
One way PET, which has gained a market share of
over five percent
since 1996, is a notable absentee.
The analysis concludes that existing PET
refillable systems are best
and metal cans and one way glass worst, all
evaluated by their
resource use and contribution to global warming
and acidification.
The study also finds that refillable glass is
not better than cartons for
drinks, due to the high level of carton recycling.
Finally, the agency says that distribution plays
a large part in the life
cycle assessment and recommends that consumers
buy locally.
Responding to the study, Environment Minister
Jürgen Trittin
repeated his threat of two months ago, that a
mandatory deposit
could be put on "ecologically disadvantageous
one way glass bottles
and drinks cans as early as next year." He
suggested that cartons
could be included in a revised quota for
ecologically advantageous
packaging.
Germany's 1991 packaging ordinance, revised in
1998, requires hefty
deposits on one way drinks containers if the
proportion of refillable
drinks containers falls below 72 percent for two
recorded years. This
happened in 1997, and official figures for 1999
to be published later
this year are set to confirm a second breach.
{Published in cooperation with
ENDS Environment
Daily, Europe's choice for
environmental news.
Environmental Data Services Ltd,
London. Email:
envdaily at ends.co.uk
© Environment News Service (ENS) 2000. All Rights Reserved.
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