Romania Won’t Scrap Eco-tax On Plastic Bags - Minister

The Romanian government won’t scrap the eco-tax charged for plastic bags and whoever said publicly that the tax would be suspended did not have the government’s approval, environment minister Nicolae Nemirschi said Thursday.

49 views

Imaginea articolului Romania Won’t Scrap Eco-tax On Plastic Bags - Minister

Romania Won’t Scrap Eco-tax On Plastic Bags - Minister

Present at a seminar regarding climate change, Nemirschi said the tax charged for plastic bags will not be scrapped.
 
"Whoever said the tax would be suspended was not speaking on behalf of the government,” the minister said.
 
The head of the Commission for Public Administration and the Environment with the Chamber of Deputies, former environment minister Sulfina Barbu, said last Wednesday the commission would require the government to suspend the enforcement of the tax for three or four months, to improve the normative act.
 
Barbu was speaking after a meeting with representatives of the country’s largest plastic bag producers, which discussed the eco-tax issue.
Minister Nemirschi said he did not attend the respective meeting because he was away on business, but said he met with bag producers two weeks before the meeting and knew their problems and claims.
"I know what their problems are and we’ll have further meetings to try and solve them, but the tax won’t be suspended,” Nemirschi said.
 
At the meeting last week, plastic bag producers criticized many of the provisions of the Emergency Ordinance which sets up the eco-tax, and also the minister’s order which contains the act’s enforcement norms.
 
Company representatives said many stores do not mark the eco-tax on shopping receipts, driving bag producers to lose the money they pay to the state when delivering their packaging. They complained about the lack of laboratories able to certify the fact that some firms already produce ecological, bio-degradable packaging, which should not be taxed.
 
“We’ll come to a point where a firm that has invested in ecological production equipment has to pay the eco-tax for bags it puts on the market, even though they are ecological, because Romania does not have laboratories that can verify the packages’ quality,” said Violeta Pandelescu, the representative of one producer of plastic bags.
 
The three-hour discussion also touched technical issues and Barbu requested the setting up of a workgroup, made up of company spokespeople and state institution delegates, which should “carefully” consider the producers’ complaints.
 
“We need a clear-cut law with fair principles and which does not lose sight of the goal of environmental protection. Seeing as we need time for discussions and considering the fact that there no Romanian laboratories can verify that a firm produces ecological wrappers, we have decided to ask the Government to suspend the ordinance’s enforcement for three, at most four months,” Barbu said at the end of the talks.
 
Silvian Ionescu, the head of the National Environment Guard, proposed the suspension of the tax on plastic bags “for a few months”, which he sees as a social measure necessary to protect the employees of the 23 local companies which manufacture plastic bags and which cannot receive authorization as ecological producers.
 
“There are 23 Romanian producers which make plastic bags on a large scale. Some of them have already purchased equipment with which to be able to produce untaxable, ecological bags. The problem is that Romania lacks a laboratory which can certify that the foil they use is ecological and biodegradable, so they’re in a dilemma”, Ionescu said Tuesday.
 
At the same time, since plastic bags have begun being taxed, their consumption has dropped drastically, and Romanian firms produce fewer and fewer bags on declining demand.
 
 On the other hand, foreign firms authorized as producers of ecological plastic have a very lucrative market in Romania, stated Ionescu, showing that this state of affairs puts the jobs 5,000 employees of the 23 major Romanian plastic bag producers in jeopardy.
 
Romania’s former government decided last year to introduce a tax of RON0.2 per bag for bags made of non-recyclable materials, which retailers offered shoppers for free. The tax is charged from companies introducing such bags on the market, both producers and importers. The tax is also applicable for reusable plastic bags and revenues from its collection go to the country’s National Environment Fund.
 
A survey of the Environment Ministry indicated the average Romanian uses 250 plastic bags per year and the bags are only used for about 20 minutes.

If you liked this story, please follow MEDIAFAX.RO on FACEBOOK »

The content of mediafax.ro is for your information only. Republishing or using this content is forbidden without express consent of MEDIAFAX. For this consent, please ask for it by mail at vanzari@mediafax.ro.

 

The free download of the press materials (text, photo and / or video), bearers of intellectual property rights, is approved by www.mediafax.ro only within 250 signs. Spaces and URL / hyperlink are not taken into account when counting signs. The collection of information can only be done in accordance with the terms agreed and mentioned here