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LIVING IN GERMANY

Pfand: How Germany plans to expand its bottle deposit scheme in 2024

From next year, a Pfand - or deposit - will be introduced to more products under plans to extend the deposit scheme. Here's what we know so far.

Deposit machines German supermarket
A customer returns bottles to a deposit machine in a German supermarket. Photo: picture alliance/dpa/dpa-Zentralbild | Monika Skolimowska

What’s happening?

Germany’s Flaschenpfand (bottle deposit, known as Pfand), is a hugely popular recycling initiative in Germany, which involves consumers paying around 25 cents extra on bottles which they can then return and receive a refund. Some other products – such as glass bottles – have a smaller deposit, but the system works in the same way.  

People often head to the supermarket with a bag – or even trolley – packed full of cans and bottles to recycle. They then receive a receipt which they can take to the cashier to get the money directly back, or off their next shopping bill. 

It’s been running for 20 years and is credited for keeping streets tidier and helping to boost recycling, something Germans take very seriously. 

READ ALSO: German word of the day – Pfand

What’s changing?

For several years, the deposit scheme only applied to mineral water, beer and soft drinks in cans and PET plastic bottles.

Since last year, however, a stricter regulation has been in effect. Customers now also have to pay a deposit on alcoholic mixed drinks, lemonades and fruit juices.

From next year, the deposit scheme will be extended even further.

In 2024, the new regulation will apply to almost all drinks from the refrigerated shelves. Customers will have to pay 25 cents more on milk, mixed milk beverages and drinkable milk products offered in one-way plastic beverage bottles.

If drinks are part of the scheme, they will carry the ‘Pfand’ logo. The aim is that supermarkets and discounters will stop selling drinks in non-returnable bottles or cans without a deposit.

“According to the German Packaging Act (VerpackG), these beverages become subject to the mandatory deposit and thus integrated into the DPG return and deposit system,” said the German Deposit System (DPG) in a statement.

Which drinks will be subject to a new deposit from 2024?

Primarily, this concerns drinking milk products (for example Müller milk), fresh milk and iced coffee-style drinks such as Starbucks DoubleShot or Nescafé Ready-To-Drink. If manufacturers and retailers sell these products in plastic bottles, they will cost 25 cents more from January 1st.

For example, if fresh milk costs €1.79 in December, you’ll have to pay €2.04 a month later. The 25 cents will then be refunded when the bottle is returned.

Some brands - such as Granini - are already adding the deposit label this year.

A juice bottle with the deposit label in 2021. Photo: picture alliance/dpa/Eckes-Granini Group GmbH | Eckes-Granini Group GmbH

However, it is still unclear how the deposit can be returned to people for these products. This is because there are often hygiene risks with dairy products. In addition to mould, unpleasant odours could also develop in the vending machines.

It is possible that customers will be asked to empty the packaging and rinse it with tap water before returning it. However, it is unclear whether all consumers would comply with this. 

What’s the reaction?

It’s mixed. Currently plastic milk containers are meant to be placed in the yellow plastics bin and picked up by local authorities, meaning they are also recycled outside of the deposit system. 

“Plastic milk bottles belong in the yellow bin and not in the return machines,” Eckhard Heuser, Chief Executive of the Dairy Industry Association, has said, reported Focus Online. 

The German Trade Association says that it is worried about leftover dairy residue affecting the recycling system if the items are mixed into the deposit machines. 

Why is the government doing this?

The changes by the Federal Ministry for the Environment are part of a larger package of measures from the European Union to prevent waste. In Germany, all of the changes are to take effect in several stages by 2030.

As well as the deposit on all beverage bottles and cans, measures also include a quota for reusable and disposable products in supermarkets.

“The one-way deposit system, which is implemented nationwide by DPG Deutsche Pfandsystem GmbH and its network of system participants and partners, is thus once again contributing to the Europe-wide objective of reusing valuable raw materials,” said the DPG. 

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For members

INSIDE GERMANY

Inside Germany: Citizenship campaign, wedding bureaucracy and landmark cinema closure

From a campaign to encourage foreigners to apply for German citizenship and the clunky process of getting married in Germany to an East German cinema, here are a few of the things we've been talking about this week.

Inside Germany: Citizenship campaign, wedding bureaucracy and landmark cinema closure

Inside Germany is our weekly look at some of the news, talking points and gossip in Germany that you might not have heard about. It’s published each Saturday and members can receive it directly to their inbox by going to their newsletter preferences or adding their email to the sign-up box in this article.

Citizenship campaign to launch

With just over a month to go until Germany’s citizenship law comes into effect, many foreign residents will be getting their documents together. 

But for those who are unsure (and do qualify under the new rules), the German government wants to convince you to become a naturalised German. 

This week we learned that a campaign will kick off on the same date the new rules enter into force – June 27th – providing foreigners with guidance for their applications.

The campaign will be launched by the Federal Government Commissioner for Migration, Refugees and Integration and aims to “inform those interested in naturalisation and those potentially entitled to naturalisation about the requirements and procedures for naturalisation”.

A website will go live when the reform comes into force. 

“It will contain information on the requirements for German citizenship, the application process and the naturalisation procedure, as well as a digital quick check, which interested parties can use to check whether they basically meet the requirements.”

People in Germany may also spot various adverts about the new on social media, including Instagram. 

A German citizenship certificate and passport.

A German citizenship certificate and passport. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Fernando Gutierrez-Juarez

Alongside cutting ordinary residence requirements from eight years to five, a previous ban on dual nationality for non-EU citizens will be lifted, allowing applicants to keep their existing passports after they become German – unless it is not permitted in their origin country. 

Meanwhile, we were also given some clarification over the exact date that German citizenship will come into force. After previously letting us know that the law would come into force on June 26th 2024, the government told us on Thursday it would be June 27th. 

There had been some confusion over this date, including among elected officials. 

Saying yes (or no) to marrying in Germany

Imagine meeting the person of your dreams in Germany – but then realising how difficult the bureaucracy requirements can be when you’re getting married. That’s the experience of many foreign residents.

Instead, a lot of couples choose to cross the border into neighbouring Denmark where the hurdles to wed are much lower, as Paul Krantz reported this week.

“Given our experience with German bureaucracy, it didn’t take much to convince us,” Sam Care, 32, who lives in Berlin told The Local.

There are, of course, some couples who stick with Germany and successfully get married here. Check out our article below to find out the steps you need to take. 

Germany in Focus 

Former Chancellor Angela Merkel this week announced more details about her upcoming memoir and when it will be released. We get into this on the new episode of the Germany in Focus podcast as well as looking at how politicians are getting on TikTok, why a row over pro-Palestinian protests at a Berlin university have sparked a nationwide row and fascinating facts about Cologne. 

Former Chancellor Angela Merkel on stage in Berlin on Tuesday.

Former Chancellor Angela Merkel on stage in Berlin. Photo: picture alliance/dpa | Fabian Sommer

Berlin’s Kino International cinema shut for renovation

One thing I love about living in Berlin is the number of cinemas. I especially like the ones with a bit of interesting history attached to them, such as the Kino International. 

This cinema, which opened in 1963 in the former East Berlin, shut its doors on May 14th for a two-year renovation.

It was viewed as a gem of the German Democratic Republic (GDR), hosting film premieres up until German reunification in 1990. Interestingly, On November 9th, 1989, the day the Berlin Wall fell, the premiere of an East German film called “Coming Out” took place – this was the first and last queer film in a GDR cinema.

One of the last films to be shown this week at the Kino before it shut was (the German dubbed) Dirty Dancing. This film premiered there in 1987!

Last weekend I took a turn to the cinema’s iconic cafe-bar before it closed. Check out the video in this tweet if you’re interested in getting a last look (at least for now) inside the building. 

Let me know if you have some recommendations for cool cinemas to check out in Germany. 

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