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EU clamps down on food waste, fast fashion

Thomas Barnes by Thomas Barnes
September 9, 2025
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Food waste awaiting treatment in a compost and biogas factory in Stains, north of Paris. ©AFP

Strasbourg (France) (AFP) – EU lawmakers gave a final green light Tuesday to a law on slashing back the mountains of food wasted in Europe each year, and curbing the environmental impact of so-called fast fashion.

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Brussels estimates the 27-nation bloc generates around 130 kilogrammes of food waste per person each year — adding up to 60 million tonnes — as well as around 15 kilos of textile waste. By curbing food waste, the EU aims by extension to cut the amount of water, fertiliser, and energy used to produce, transform, and store foodstuffs that end up being thrown away. The same logic applies to textiles, where the EU says manufacturing a single cotton T-shirt requires 2,700 litres of fresh water — the amount the average person drinks in two and a half years.

Lawmakers approved without amendment the text previously negotiated with the bloc’s member states. When it comes to food, countries will be given binding waste-reduction targets but are free to choose how to meet them. By 2030, they will have to slash by 30 percent the food waste generated by households, retailers, and restaurants, compared to 2021-2023 levels. They will also have to cut 10 percent of the waste generated by food processing and manufacturing. Parliament rapporteur Anna Zalewska has said “targeted solutions” could include promoting so-called “ugly” fruit and vegetables, clarifying date labelling, and donating unsold-but-consumable food.

Lawmakers had last year backed more ambitious cuts — 40 and 20 percent respectively — before a final compromise was thrashed out with the European Commission and the EU’s 27 member states. The final proposal still faced pushback from the restaurant and hospitality sectors, which opposed binding targets and instead advocated a push to educate the public about waste. “The key is raising awareness — especially among consumers,” said Marine Thizon of the European hotel, restaurant, and cafe industry group Hotrec. “More than 50 percent of food waste in Europe happens at the level of households,” she said.

The new law updates a 2008 EU directive on waste and widens its scope to include the textile industry. It creates new obligations for the sector, with producers required to foot the bill for collecting, sorting, and recycling clothing as well as everything from carpets to mattresses. Less than one percent of textiles worldwide are recycled at present, the EU says, with 12.6 million tonnes of textile waste generated in the bloc each year.

Lawmakers hope the law can counter the impact of ultra low-cost fashion imports, many of them from China, by platforms such as Shein — which is also being investigated by Brussels over risks linked to illegal products. “Ultra fast-fashion creates mountains of textile waste,” the right-wing French lawmaker Laurent Castillo said following the law’s adoption, saying the phenomenon “endangers French and European firms as well as being extremely polluting.”

The EU has separately moved to limit the massive influx of small packages fuelled by the fast-fashion boom by proposing a flat import fee of two euros ($2.35) per parcel. Last year, 4.6 billion small parcels entered the bloc — more than 145 per second — of which 91 percent came from China. No waste-reduction target was set for the farm sector, to the chagrin of environmental advocates such as WWF, which said it was “concerned” about the decision. “Losses that occur before, during and after harvesting or livestock rearing make up a considerable amount of food waste across the value chain,” said the group.

© 2024 AFP

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