EU ban on lead ammunition for airguns, shotguns and rifles

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The defeat of the amendment to the Environment Bill I remember fondly - You said It didn't have a hope in hell of going through - now, again, BASC wants credit for defeating an amendment to a Bill that you said had "no chance". This comment I have made before, twice .
This. +1.
 
I'd also add to my post that the only other similarly dense and soft metals are either more expensive, more toxic/radioactive or both!
 
Here's your choice. Gold looks a good fit.

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There are alternatives in this, but not restricted to the periodic table only. Not everything needs to be made from single element materials.

See this patent for a metal filled polymer bullet, for example.

Innovation!

 
There are alternatives in this, but not restricted to the periodic table only. Not everything needs to be made from single element materials.

See this patent for a metal filled polymer bullet, for example.

Innovation!

Of course. That is what Tungsten Matrix was, for instance. However, you ain't going to produce a (useful) bullet (or shot) that doesn't contain one of those elements.
 
Has anyone come up with a polymer coated/powder coated lead shot yet ? Works for chassis might work for shot ? Of course nothing but rust eats chassis.
 
There are alternatives in this, but not restricted to the periodic table only. Not everything needs to be made from single element materials.

See this patent for a metal filled polymer bullet, for example.

Innovation!


Is this a cost-effective solution? It looks to be fairly complex = costly. What cost per varmint round?

Secondly, it contains man-made plastics. How is spraying synthetic material into the environment going to pass muster?

I do wonder if condemning/banning what works now [lead] because we hope it will provoke industry to redouble efforts to find a viable option is wisdom.

Lets see the scalable and cost-effective production of viable alternatives first.

[per my earlier posts, I am converted to Cu for deer calibers and above. I remain utterly unpersuaded that a viable lead replacement option is available for varmint control]
 
Of course. That is what Tungsten Matrix was, for instance. However, you ain't going to produce a (useful) bullet (or shot) that doesn't contain one of those elements.

I wont, but someone is obviously trying to!

Is this a cost-effective solution? It looks to be fairly complex = costly. What cost per varmint round?

Secondly, it contains man-made plastics. How is spraying synthetic material into the environment going to pass muster?

I do wonder if condemning/banning what works now [lead] because we hope it will provoke industry to redouble efforts to find a viable option is wisdom.

Lets see the scalable and cost-effective production of viable alternatives first.

[per my earlier posts, I am converted to Cu for deer calibers and above. I remain utterly unpersuaded that a viable lead replacement option is available for varmint control]

I think here where opinions differ. I believe that the restriction of one thing does lead to the innovation / development / improvement of another. If theres no motivation to improve, there likely wont be much innovation. Not to say ideally we would have all alternatives ready right now, but thats just not how these things work.

Reality is lead is toxic. We may argue that the way we injest it may have no / limited impact on our health, but to others it is poison that they dont want anything to do with. Surely it can only help the "shooting community" to be happy to embrace change on this specific subject? Less lead = more viable markets for the product = more exposure / accessibility to game = better outlook by the public on shooting in general.

Not expecting the switch to non lead will "solve" peoples perceptions of shooting, but it certainly helps us and our health.

From my own perspective I'm actively looking for what shotgun catridges that I can switch to for the next time I stock up that can be plastic and non lead friendly. This will be my first step into transitioning to non lead / eco alternatives.
 
Has anyone come up with a polymer coated/powder coated lead shot yet ? Works for chassis might work for shot ? Of course nothing but rust eats chassis.
You boys should read the Guardian.
You'd be so much better informed.:)


 
Has anyone come up with a polymer coated/powder coated lead shot yet ? Works for chassis might work for shot ? Of course nothing but rust eats chassis.

Was done several years back called T shot but never classified as non-toxic, I guess like nickel plating lead shot it is
still lead.


Bottom line as was said before all metals in appropriate dose are toxic.
 
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You boys should read the Guardian.
You'd be so much better informed.:)



Started with a big EU grant just like the also made in Spain wads eley are using, guess the eu want their grant money back by banning lead. Plus the bioammo wads still take months to a year to decompose so landowners who do not allow non biodegradable wads are not wanting them.

Even 50 million cartridges is small numbers compared to the requirements of the U.K. and EU.

Each U.K. cartridge maker do around that number or more each per year.
 
You boys should read the Guardian.
You'd be so much better informed.:)



If the price of being informed is reading the Guardian, I shall remain blissfully ignorant but thank you.
 
I've read that doc forward by BASC

Now I'm a fan of BASC - unlike some on here

However there is NO information contained within that FACT summary that is new

I speak as someone who had had to set up safety protocols and conducted hygiene surveys for Industries that use lead at work

I'm familiar with the Lead at Work Regs - my company used to undertake blood lead sampling of employees on behalf of industrial clients

My dear old dad wrote his master's thesis as a medical doctor (whilst working on the lead mines in Zambia) on lead poisoning and placental transfer of lead - he went on to work for the HSE before establishing our consultancy together

I can see a clear argument for the restriction of shotgun pellets in wetlands.

I understand the cumulative effects of heavy metals on wetland birds and their effects on predatory species

I remain entirely unconvinced of the need to control lead in rifle rounds on game animals on the basis of ingested lead in the food chain

It is, in my opinion, a political decision in search of scientific justification
 
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I have passed your query on steel manufacturing capacity and whether it will be sufficient to meet shooting needs onto colleagues at BASC for consideration.
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Any update?
 
Have to admit that the logic makes no sense but at least there are alternatives. I shoot non lead GMX for boar and it is accurate and VERY effective.IMG_4065.webp
 
Personally, I don't see moving from lead to "non-toxic" alternatives a big issue, if anything it's moving forward.

I have faith that the rise in non toxic alternatives will drive innovation into creating "lead-like" materials, without the toxicity that prohibits actual lead being used.

I've also used steel catridges on the foreshore quite a few times on geese and ducks with no issue. If someone can shoot a goose effectively with a steel catridge, I'm pretty sure any other bird would follow suit.

It's scientifically impossible, either now or at any time in the future, to create a "lead-like" material that would be either non-toxic or remotely practicable. This is the big problem, and in fact the big lie at the heart of the campaign to move away from lead. They say we're ignoring the scientific evidence, yet trying to have us believe that if we give up lead some equivalent alternative material will magically become available. It won't and it can't. All materials contain elements, and there is no element that allows us to create an equivalent substitute for lead. That's a fundamental scientific truth and it cannot be altered in future.

There are some alternatives that are inferior in one or more important respect:
Bismuth - too rare to meet demand. Already excessively expensive. Allegedly does not store well.
Steel/ iron - ballistically inferior. Welfare issues. If it was viable, we'd have all taken to using it long ago. Suitable loads do not exist, and cannot exist.
Tungsten matrix - this is a mixture of tungsten and plastic. Misuse of a strategic and fairly rare metal. Pellets are made of plastic with heavy metal powder in. No evidence that littering the environment with these is environmentally acceptable. Expensive.

While I'm glad that you've had positive experience with steel, I have still not been able to find anybody who can state that they have experience of safely using steel shot to shoot game, to the equivalent effect of a lead load of 32g of 5 shot, which can be used in virtually any gun. The bare facts are that to replicate the effect of that load requires a steel load of over 40 grams of size 3, which cannot possibly be fitted into a shorter cartridge than 3.5" and is therefore not a possibility for any gun other than a super-magnum. The only load matching those parameters is £175/slab and has a plastic wad - which disqualifies it from use.
 
My point to this would be that the main drivers for developing alternatives to lead that are capable in all firearms would be a legislative change. This is how innovation is driven in many sectors, most notably the automotive sector (reducing emissions etc). I'm positive if a ban is introduced that manufacturers will be very motivated to develop alternatives in all firearms to keep themselves in buisness!

Ref Palmer Mike - Not wishing to throw anyone under any form of bus. I'm sure there will be an alternative to lead for the firearm you have to keep you shooting. Maybe not now, but by the time any ban may take effect.

That point would be wholly incorrect. The limitations on developing alternatives to lead are not legislative, but the laws of physics. It is IMPOSSIBLE that an equivalent alternative to lead will ever exist. Innovation is always limited by the the laws of science.
Manufacturers will be very motivated to develop alternatives, but won't find any. Just like in the automotive sector, what you will find is companies cheating and lying to pretend that they do have products that meet the criteria, and a complete mess of well-intended measures having harmful effects.
Asked directly, no manufacturer believes that they will be able to develop a new type of pellet that ticks all the boxes. We're just going to be left with a choice between several options all of which are inferior in one or more regard, along with tens of thousands of guns rendered obsolete, serious quarry welfare issues - which will probably lead in short order to the end of shooting altogether.
There's no virtue in using wilful ignorance to shoot oneself in the foot.
 
Here's your choice. Gold looks a good fit.

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+1.
To expand on this, any substitute for lead will require using at least one element with a bigger atomic number than lead. They're ALL radioactive except bismuth, which we already know to be unsuitable. There are no gaps in the periodic table; there is no space where an "innovative" or "technological" solution could ever be discovered or developed.
 
I hear what you are saying and its rather populist now for people to call for evidence-led policy development - but not to agree/believe in the evidence when it does not suit their agenda - this is happening across all sectors - not just in shooting and conservation.

The evidence of the impacts of lead ammunition on health and wildlife have been adding up for decades. Few of us will take the time to review the evidence - let alone to do so objectively - its just our human condition to go with our own personal experience/prejudices etc.

BASC has been fighting against disproportionate and unsubstantiated restrictions on the use of lead ammunition for 40 years, whilst investing in research and training on lead alternatives, but time is running out and the wolf is at the door.

Either the UK shooting organisations take a lead in encouraging a voluntary transition away from lead ammunition (that is not a voluntary 'ban') or we end up with people outside our sector making decisions for us; and the UK shooting organisations took the lead in February last year.

What we have seen with the new EU wetlands ban that will take effect from February 2023 in EU states, and possibly in Northern Ireland, is people outside our sector making decisions for us.

Most EU member states already have national laws in place restricting the use of lead shot in wetlands except for Poland, Ireland, Romania, Slovenia and Malta. The new EU regulations are in effect using a sledgehammer to crack a nut, albeit the 20-year intransigence in some countries against any form of legislation since the Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds (AEWA) has certainly not helped matters.

For more context on the EU wetlands lead ban see:


For more context on the EU near-total lead ban see:


@Liveonce hope this helps address your comment also.

Many people would reasonably hold the opinion that BASC is itself guilty of the populism you describe. The facts are that in 2015, there was not sufficient scientific evidence to justify a ban on lead shot, and that in the intervening period between that point and when BASC decided to completely reverse its position no new evidence was published that could possibly be construed as sufficient to justify that reversal.

It seems far more likely that your policy development was driven by the pressure of external populists not science. After all, you've stated in this very post that the problem is that the "wolf is at the door", and the proposed restrictions are disproportionate and unsubstantiated. You can hardly criticise shooters and members for being "populist" and not agreeing with BASC's position, given that it's abundantly clear that science is not leading these developments, ignorance is.
 
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