EU Moves Closer to Putting a Waste Tax on Fashion

The EU agreed a deal Tuesday on new rules that will make big fashion companies pay to clean up clothing waste.

The deal between the European Union’s Parliament and Council requires all EU countries to establish Extended Producer Responsibility schemes, making companies producing and selling textiles responsible for covering the costs of collecting, sorting and recycling them at the end of their life. The schemes would come into effect within 30 months of the directive.

The EPR fees will apply to all retailers, including e-commerce platforms based outside Europe. Negotiators pointedly took aim at the fast fashion sector, noting that ultra-fast-fashion models should be considered when deterring the size of contributions to EPR schemes.

The deal still requires final approval from the European Parliament and Council, but is expected to move forward.

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Fast Fashion Firms Prepare for EU Crackdown on Waste Mountain

Within a year, the sorting centre run by garment re-use and recycling charity Moda Re plans to double the volume it handles to 40,000 metric tonnes annually.

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