Government's inaction on microbeads pollutant is 'inadequate', say Greens

The Green Party has called for a full ban on the controversial plastic ingredient

Jon Stone
Sunday 28 February 2016 17:26 GMT
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Microbeads are found in toothpaste and other cosmetic products
Microbeads are found in toothpaste and other cosmetic products

The Government’s refusal to ban polluting plastic microbeads from cosmetic products is “inadequate”, the leader of the Green Party has said.

In December last year the Barack Obama signed a new law banning the beads completely from products on sale in America – but they remain legal in Britain.

Canada and Sweden have also taken steps towards a ban, but the British Government says the industry will phase out the beads voluntarily

Microbeads are tiny solid plastic balls and can be found in some toothpastes, body scrubs and other cosmetics and give products a “speckled” appearance.

The beads serve an aesthetic purpose but some manufacturers also claim they can help with exfoliation or cleaning.

The solid plastic particles however do not biodegrade and so can cause environmental damage when washed down the drain.

The beads are not filtered out by water treatment plans and it has been suggested that they can carry toxins once they themselves become contaminated.

Aquatic creatures have also been known to mistake the particles for food.

“The government’s plan to work with industry for a voluntary phase-out is simply inadequate,” Bennett said,” Natalie Bennett told the Independent.

“It has acknowledged that these call biological and toxicological harm in the oceans, but is failing to act.

“The United States, with the full backing even of Republicans, has agreed a ban by April 2107. Britain surely can act as quickly, if not quicker.

“The cosmetics industry has acknowledged that alternatives are readily available, but its plan for a phase-out by 2020 is way too slow.”

Ms Bennett was speaking as her party’s spring conference voted to officially adopt a policy in favour of banning microbeads.

Some manufacturers have voluntarily removed microbeads from their products after consumer campaigners but they remain in others.

A new app called Beat the Microbead allows consumers to scan bar codes of cosmetic products to check if they contain the particles.

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