Views
5 years ago

Europe's Bioeconomy: The Business of Nature

  • Text
  • Food
  • Nature
  • Environment
  • Union
  • Agriculture
  • Forestry
  • Science
  • Biotech
  • Bioeconomy
EUobserver's 2018 Business in Europe magazine takes a closer look at Europe's bioeconomy and how "the business of nature" is changing the way people look at waste and natural resources.

standard, EN13432, for

standard, EN13432, for products that meet certain criteria for compostability), and can therefore be collected alongside food waste, for example. without adequate waste collection and treatment, it could aggravate plastics leakage and create problems for mechanical recycling". But as von Pogrell explained at an event in Brussels organised by the European Policy Centre in February: "Biobased plastics are not necessarily biodegradable and compostable plastics are not necessarily biobased." Some bioplastics can therefore be recycled with their plastic cousins (though they can lose some physical properties after several 'cycles'), but some can't and therefore end up contaminating collections. How do you decipher which is which? With great difficulty. EU RULES ON COMPOSTABLE PLASTICS Brussels decided to step in. Proposed amendments to the packaging and packaging waste directive as well as the new plastics strategy published by the European Commission in January recognised the role bioplastics could play in helping "decrease our dependency on fossil fuels." Plastics' share of global oil consumption is expected to rise from six percent in 2014 to 20 percent by 2050, according to the Ellen MacArthur Foundation. However, the commission said, "in the absence of clear labelling or marking for consumers, and To avoid "false environmental claims" and reduce confusion, the commission will publish harmonised rules for labelling "compostable" or "biodegradable" plastics. A life cycle assessment will also be developed to ensure biobased plastics result in "genuine environmental benefits compared to the non-renewable alternatives". The commission can't afford to hang about, either. As well its own anti-plastic legislative push, there's a pull from consumers looking for alternatives – the likes of Coca-Cola, Danone and Puma are all showing heightened interest in bioplastics - and Europe is where the action will be. Europe's share of global bioplastics production is forecast to jump from 18 percent to 25 percent between now and 2022; packaging will also remain the strongest segment. This could create jobs, reduce carbon emissions, make use of waste and revive rural areas, according to the bioplastics industry. But we shouldn't get too carried away. "If anyone thinks bioplastics will save the planet they are delusional," says one industry leader. Indeed, the most pressing issue is to reduce excessive and unnecessary use of plastics. Photo: Arshad Pooloo 06 — BUSINESS IN EUROPE MAGAZINE 2018

NEW BIOECONOMY STRATEGY WILL HAVE TO ADDRESS JOB LOSSES The European Commission's 2012 bioeconomy strategy is in need of an update, with even the commission itself admitting the paper had weaknesses. Bulgaria had apparently not received word of the bad news. Neither had the European commissioner for agriculture, Phil Hogan. dropped consistently. By 2014, the most recent stood at 18.59 million. Last February, Bulgaria opened a debate at a meeting of agriculture ministers with a paper stating that the bioeconomy employed around 22 million While the overall job market in the EU shrunk during that period, the bioeconomy sector was hit proportionally harder. A large share of that is due to a relentless drop in agriculture jobs. The bad news was that their information was bioeconomy strategy paper, published back in February 2012. At the presentation of the strategy in Brussels, Maire Geoghegan-Quinn, who was the EU commissioner for research, innovation and science, at the time, said the bioeconomy was not simply a "niche area", it also promoted growth and jobs. Between 2008 and 2014 over a million farm jobs evaporated. The wood production and wooden furniture sector also saw some 380,000 jobs lost. STRATEGY HAD 'WEAKNESSES' outdated in the 2012 bioeconomy strategy paper and accompanying action plan. The commission has planned to overhaul the entire strategy. "With an annual turnover of around two trillion euro, and employing around 22 million people, the bioeconomy is already one of the Union's biggest and most important sectors. Its potential for the future is even greater," she said. More recent estimates showed that the sector the commission's in-house think tank, the Joint Research Centre, revealed the total number of bioeconomy jobs in the EU was never that high. Instead, it has been decreasing steadily. In 2008, the bioeconomy employed 20.76 million In November 2017, the commission published a review of its own strategy paper. Although it was worded diplomatically, it was nothing short of a scathing natural resources sustainably; reduce dependence on fossil fuels; mitigate and adapt to climate change; and job creation. The review said that the "intrinsic weaknesses" of the strategy and action plan was that goals were only generally described, and that the goals lacked targets. 07 — BUSINESS IN EUROPE MAGAZINE 2018

More magazines