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Fruit stickers are annoying and bad for the environment. So why did an Australian ban come unstuck?

Fruit stickers are annoying and bad for the environment. So why did an Australian ban come unstuck?

The Guardian29-06-2025
Fruit stickers may be small, but they can be mighty annoying.
Each year 5.62bn plastic labels are picked off fruit and vegetables in Australia, data shows. Those that are not accidentally eaten, washed down the sink or buried in compost, usually end up in landfill, adding about 110 tonnes of plastic to the pile.
South Australia was set to ban the stickers from September, along with other problematic plastics like soy sauce fish, and it would have been the first Australian jurisdiction to do so.
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Residents overwhelmingly supported the proposed ban. 'These are so bloody annoying and unnecessary,' one wrote in a submission. 'I hate these stickers and consider them totally unnecessary on my fruit products,' said another.
But the stickers will be sticking around a little longer.
This week SA shelved its September deadline, after growers and industry bodies asked for more time. Meanwhile, across the Tasman Sea, New Zealand's ban, instituted in 2023, has been put on hold.
Are fruit sticker bans coming unstuck?
The plastic labels become a problem when they end up in home compost or in the curbside organics bin, says Ryan Collins, the head of research at Planet Ark.
'If they're left on those scraps, on the skin, and they go into curbside collection, then it ends up being a contaminant for the organics processor or composter,' he says. That becomes a cost and quality issue for organic waste companies, whose products are used in agriculture and urban landscaping.
They could also become litter, Collins says.
Cip Hamilton, the plastics campaign manager at the Australian Marine Conservation Society, says the stickers often end up in compost bins and eventually contaminate the soil. 'Once in the environment, plastics are almost impossible to recover. Plastic fragments can cause devastating impacts to our wildlife and ecosystems.'
The plastic labels, glued to the skin of apples, bananas, pears and more, are for convenience: there is nothing in Australia's Food Standards Code that requires retailers to label fresh fruits and vegetables.
Most include a PLU: the acronym for price look-up code, four or five digits used to identify the variety of fruit and how it was grown – part of a voluntary global system for categorising fresh produce. Some feature eye-catching designs.
The stickers are the best option for providing information to consumers and retailers (about origin, variety and price) with the least amount of packaging, the Australian Fresh Produce Alliance said in a submission last year.
'Additionally, they play a vital role in inventory management, traceability, reducing food waste and quality control for both producers and retailers.'
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There were non-plastic alternatives – like compostable stickers – the industry group said, but they were not yet available at commercial scale.
Fruit tattoos – labels lasered on to skin or peel – have also emerged as an option, trialled by producers and supermarkets across Europe and the UK.
Several Australian jurisdictions have flagged fruit stickers for the chopping block, as they look to get rid of single-use plastics. And governments have agreed they are a priority, where better coordination is needed.
The South Australian environment minister, Dr Susan Close, said the state remained committed to the reform. 'Many South Australians told us through previous surveys and consultations that they 'loathed' fruit stickers as an inconvenience to remove before they recycle their food scraps.'
It was a short delay – rather than a stop – Close said, and over the next 12 months the government would be working with growers, industry bodies and other jurisdictions.
New South Wales has proposed to require compostable labels by the end of 2030. In Tasmania, fruit stickers have been slated for the second stage of the state's single-use plastic phase-out.
New Zealand, which has delayed its bar on non-compostable labels to 2028 to align with the EU, was 'not stepping back from its leadership role in tackling plastic waste', the environment minister, Penny Simmonds, said.
'We are taking a more measured approach to ensure that alternatives are available, that industry has time to adapt, and that any changes are well-considered and manageable so that cost-of-living impacts are limited for businesses and households.'
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WA government put ‘very rosy spin' on report into Woodside emissions at Murujuga, scientist's private email says
WA government put ‘very rosy spin' on report into Woodside emissions at Murujuga, scientist's private email says

The Guardian

time6 hours ago

  • The Guardian

WA government put ‘very rosy spin' on report into Woodside emissions at Murujuga, scientist's private email says

The Western Australia government 'put a very rosy spin' on a summary report of a project checking if pollutants from Woodside were damaging 50,000-year-old rock art, according to a private email sent by the lead scientist. In an email released to the ABC, Murujuga Rock Art Monitoring Project lead scientist Prof Ben Mullins, of Curtin University, said the WA government had 'insisted' on writing the summary report, despite a contract saying that Curtin should write it. Mullins also wrote in his email to the vice-chancellor that the state Department of Water and Environmental Regulation had probably 'hoped everyone would only read the summary and not the full report'. Rock art expert Prof Benjamin Smith at the University of Western Australia said earlier this year the summary report was 'not worth the paper it is written on' and characterised it as propaganda. Sign up: AU Breaking News email Smith has said the full report does show the rock art is being damaged by industrial emissions, but the WA government and Mullins have said the MRAMP studies suggest it is not, and that damage detected to some rocks was likely from historic emissions in the region in the 1970s and 1980s. MRAMP was set up to examine if emissions from nearby industry, including Woodside's Karratha gas plant, were damaging the rock art in the Pilbara region of WA. The federal environment minister, Murray Watt, has said he intends to approve a plan from Woodside to extend its North West Shelf gas operations, including the gas plant, until 2070. Woodside is still in talks with the government about conditions that Watt has said relate to the release of industrial emissions that could pose a threat to the rock art. The details of those conditions have not been released. MRAMP produced three reports – a summary, an 800-page full technical report and a report about the development of environmental quality guidelines. The results of the second year of the four-year project were used as part of a widespread and successful lobbying effort from the state and federal governments to dismiss concerns from UN advisers that ongoing industrial emissions were damaging some of the rock art at the site. The Murujuga site, which has more than a million petroglyphs, was placed on the world heritage list in June after the committee ignored the concerns of UN advisers. Mullins' email was replying to Melinda Fitzgerald, Curtin's deputy vice-chancellor for research, who had asked about concerns that a chart in the summary document had been altered. The alteration removed an aqua dotted line on the chart that showed a number of sites breaching an interim level for nitrogen dioxide. Mullins wrote in the email the state government and the Murujuga Aboriginal Corporation (MAC) had both 'insisted' the chart be altered. The original chart remained in a longer companion report. Sign up to Breaking News Australia Get the most important news as it breaks after newsletter promotion Guardian Australia asked Mullins why he had said the summary report had 'put a very rosy spin' on the findings, and why he thought the state government had hoped people would not read the full report. He replied 'no comment'. Mullins told the ABC his project had agreed to remove the aqua line 'for effective communication' and he stood by the research which was now 'integral to the Unesco world heritage inscription'. Raelene Cooper, a Mardathoonera woman of the Save Our Songlines group fighting Woodside's plans, said the release of the email was a 'complete vindication of scientific experts and whistleblowers who called out a massive government cover-up as soon as this report was released in May'. She said a royal commission was needed to investigate 'covering up evidence of industrial damage to Murujuga's sacred rock art', adding 'someone needs to be held accountable for this'. The Guardian has approached the WA government and MAC for comment.

Decisions on planning applications in Monmouthshire
Decisions on planning applications in Monmouthshire

South Wales Argus

time8 hours ago

  • South Wales Argus

Decisions on planning applications in Monmouthshire

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Roof plans Plans to install a temporary roof to an existing concrete material bay at Llanfoist Highways Depot, Merthyr Road, Llanfoist, have been approved by a delegated panel of Monmouthshire County Council planners. The application, lodged by the council, was in relation to a small 10m by 10m concrete materials bay used for tipping road sweepings. The plan is to place a temporary roof on this structure using a steel frame and taurinox fabric which will be off white in colour. 5. No to glamping site Planners have turned down an application for a glamping site at Swallows Nest, Tyr Pwll, Parc Llettis Road, Coldbrook, on what was previously residential land. The plans, submitted by Elizabeth Pengelly, of the same address, included the construction of wash facilities and the building of a field shelter for animals, doubling as an observation deck. Planners felt the scale and layout of the proposed glamping units, a new car parking area and the associated activity by users of the site would cause unacceptable noise disturbance to nearby residents. It was also felt the increase in traffic using the narrow rural lane to the proposed car park, would significantly inconvenience existing road users and cause harm to local amenity. 6. Travellers site Monmouthshire planners have given the go ahead for new travellers site on land opposite New Stables, Llancayo House, Abergavenny Road, Llancayo. The plans include four bespoke family related pitches with one static and touring caravan and a day/utility room per pitch. There will also be emergency flood access, the installation of private treatment plant and ecological enhancements, which are partially retrospective. Existing stables and kennels need to be removed from the site as they are vulnerable to flooding and the new private treatment plant needs to be installed 12 months to ensure the integrity of the River Usk Special Area of Conservation. 7. Agricultural building Plans for an agricultural machinery store at Lower Meend Farm Farm Road, Lydart, Mitchel Troy, have been approved by a delegated officer from Monmouthshire County Council. The applicant, Ms J Sadler, of the same address, has been given the go ahead to build a new 45ft x 30ft agricultural machinery store, a hay barn and hard stand with associated green infrastructure and biodiversity enhancements. One of the conditions of approval was that the new building should not be used for anything other than to store hay and agricultural equipment unless otherwise approved in writing by the council. 8. First floor extension Plans for a first floor extension at 1 St Mary's Way, Usk, have been approved by a delegated officer from Monmouthshire County Council. The application was submitted by Mr Williams, of Marlborough Close, Charlton Kings, Cheltenham. The work on the two-storey, semi-detached home, which is not listed, will include a first floor extension to the side over the existing garage and utility room. The applicant also wants to partially convert the garage, including alterations to the roof and front elevation. The materials proposed for the development are brick for the walls and concrete tiles for the roofs both to match the existing dwelling. 9. Tractor store Plans for a tractor shed and feed stone on land north of Primrose Green, Raglan, have been approved by a delegated officer from Monmouthshire County Council. The applicant was Mr Williams, of DH EE & JP Williams, Lower Ty Newydd, Clytha. 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House extension Plans for a porch and living room extension with a balcony over at a house in Chepstow have been approved by a delegated officer from Monmouthshire County Council. The plans are also for a single storey rear extension over raised garden at first floor level and were submitted by Sabrina Deans, of the same address. The property is an end-of-terrace home with Chepstow Town Wall, a scheduled monument, at the back of it. It sits within an Archaeological Sensitive Area. Chepstow Town Council recommended the refusal of the application because it felt the front extension went against planning policy as it was not in keeping with the local area, was an overdevelopment of the site and lacks privacy to neighbouring properties. The town council was satisfied with the proposed rear extension. 12. 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Change of use Plans to change the use of the first and second floors of 17 Market Street, Abergavenny, have been approved by a delegated officer. The plans, submitted to Monmouthshire County Council, were to change the use from residential to office space with associated storage. The applicant was Daniel Williams, of the same address. The building is Grade II listed and is thought to date to the late 17th century, but was largely reconstructed in the mid 19th century and altered in the 20th century. The site is within the Central Shopping Area of Abergavenny and the Abergavenny Conservation Area. A planning officers report said as no physical work is proposed, there will be no impact on the listed building or wider street scene and the change from residential use will result in a lower demand for parking. 16. Conservatory Plans to build a conservatory at Penyclawdd Cottage The Causeway Undy, have been approved by a delegated officer from Monmouthshire County Council. 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Billionaire inventor Sir James Dyson's plan to build helicopter pad on new estate infuriates locals who say it will spoil their 'little oasis' of calm
Billionaire inventor Sir James Dyson's plan to build helicopter pad on new estate infuriates locals who say it will spoil their 'little oasis' of calm

Daily Mail​

time12 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Billionaire inventor Sir James Dyson's plan to build helicopter pad on new estate infuriates locals who say it will spoil their 'little oasis' of calm

Billionaire inventor Sir James Dyson has been accused of putting his own 'travelling convenience' ahead of protecting birds living near his £25million country estate over plans to build a helipad. The 78-year-old entrepreneur - best-known for inventing the cyclone bagless vacuum cleaner - last year set an Irish property record with the 850 acre Ballynatray estate on the banks of the River Blackwater. But an application by Britain's fourth richest man for a new helicopter landing area to accommodate weekly flights has angered some nearby residents who fear the resulting noise will ruin their 'little oasis' of unspoilt nature. One even asked why their peace and tranquility should be ruined 'for the sake of one person's travelling convenience'. Sir James's purchase of the Ballynatray Estate represents the latest addition to his astonishing global property portfolio which already saw him own more land in England than the King. Under its previous owner, Henry Gwyn-Jones, the fully-staffed Georgian river-front mansion was available as an upmarket holiday rental and 120-guest wedding venue. Over the past year it has undergone a major restoration project, with the classical-style house temporarily covered in plastic sheeting while work took place. But it is plans for a helipad - along with wastewater treatment works - which have sparked opposition from residents of the sparsely-populated countryside on the Cork-Waterford border, home to species including ospreys, hen harriers and egrets, as well as otters. Opponents include David Orr, 70, who told the Daily Mail that his objections were 'purely an environmental issue', with local woodland 'home to numerous birds and wildlife'. 'I was down there the other evening and there were three or four big fallow stags and a doe,' he said. 'There's a nesting area that was one of the sites of the biggest heronries in Ireland or even Europe. 'It's home to lots of birds, red squirrels, otters, deer, badgers, foxes. It's only about 30 acres but it's an oasis. 'Of late we have sea eagles, along with buzzards, ospreys and red kites here. 'These are birds that are just slowly, slowly coming in here. 'When you have a little sanctuary, you try and minimise disturbance.' According to Mr Orr, helicopters have already begun regularly flying in and out of Ballynatray since Sir James's purchase. 'It scares the hell out of our own ducks and geese. It's a noise that comes out of nowhere.' Gary and Karina Ricken, who live directly opposite the estate, are 'deeply concerned' that noise from regular helicopter flights would impact nearby wildlife and his quality of life. In a letter to planners they wrote: 'The introduction of a helicopter landing area will fundamentally alter this natural soundscape, replacing birdsong and the sounds of nature with the intrusive noise of rotor blades.' Also against the plan was David Naylor, who said the Blackwater River was 'continually under attack from more, bigger, better, be it housing, buildings, boats and jetskis and now helicopters'. He added: 'The harm to local wildlife is also a concern, the snipe, curlews and herons won't be able to object but they will be affected.' In a letter to planners, Sir James writes that he is the 'ultimate beneficial owner' of Ballynatray House and demesne which is 'held by Glashedy Fitzwilliam Trustees Limited on my behalf'. Waterford City and County Council initially concluded that the proposed 50 annual helicopter flights may have 'a significant disturbance effect' on wildlife living in a protected area. But a report by wildlife consultants submitted in response by the estate said there was 'no likelihood of significant disturbance' due to the modern design of helicopter involved and the height and routing of the flight path. It 'objectively concluded' that the plans would not 'adversely affect' protected habitats, adding 'there is no reasonable scientific doubt in relation to this conclusion'. The application, submitted in the name of Ballynatray's estate manager, was subsequently approved, subject to a list of conditions - only for Mr Orr to lodge an appeal. He wrote: 'This small area of land contains a very wide variety of species of both flora and fauna and is in serious need of protection. 'It seems to be that for the sake of one person's travelling convenience a large number of both human and non-human inhabitants of this area are going to be disturbed.' The appeal is expected to be considered before the end of the year. Sir James's elder son Jake - now chief engineer at his father's firm - himself faced widespread local opposition to his plan to install a landing pad in the grounds of his 18th Century Somerset home in 2018. But he was eventually granted permission after agreeing not to fly helicopters in or out of the estate during church services. A keen farmer, Sir James is estimated to own around 25,000 acres including huge tracts of Lincolnshire farmland bought from the Crown Estate, dwarfing the holdings of members of the traditional landed aristocracy. He sparked accusations of hypocrisy after moving the headquarters of his company to Singapore in 2019 despite his support for Brexit. In response, the father-of-three – valued along with his family at £20.8bn - has stressed that the company which bears his name is expanding operations in the UK where it continues to employ around 3,500 people. A spokesman for Sir James declined to comment about the helipad plans.

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