Favourite childhood product set to be banned

  • This topic has 3 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 1 year ago by Rod63.
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    • #1816929
      Janelle Ward
      Member

      This product was almost certainly a part of your childhood – maybe when the tooth fairy came and definitely during art and craft activities. It’s set to be banned by the European Commission from this week.

      The ban relates to plastic glitter.

      Products already on shelves will continue to be sold until stock runs out, and glitter used in products such as cosmetics and detergents can be sold until the end of the transition periods.

      Biodegradable or soluble glitter is still legal, as is plastic glitter in glitter glue, paint, jewellery and snow globes. However, plastic glitter that easily falls off decorative objects, such as Christmas decorations or party hats, falls under the ban, as do goods containing microbeads – small plastic beads used in cosmetic products for exfoliation.

      “The purpose is not to ban all glitter but replace plastic glitter with more environmentally friendly glitter that does not pollute our oceans,” the European Commission stated.

      “It is estimated that 42,000 tonnes of microplastics intentionally added to products are released in the EU every year.

      “The new rules will prevent the release to the environment of about half a million tonnes of microplastics.”

      Microplastics have been found in everything from drinking water to the tissue of marine animals such as whales and in human breast milk.

      It’s estimated the average adult consumes about 2000 microplastics per year through salt alone.

      Do you support this ban? Should balloons also be banned?

    • #1817014
      Auction Girl
      Participant

      Yes I most certainly do.

    • #1817016
      52-KID
      Participant

      Yes, I do. There is so much plastic around, I would never have even considered glitter. This is a good ban, and doesn’t ban glitter completely. As for the microbeads, I wonder how to dispose of them if you have any

    • #1817026
      Rod63
      Participant

      Yes and yes!

      They are no-brainers.

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