Australia to End Plastic Bags in Supermarkets
AUSTRALIA: January 11, 2008
SYDNEY - Australia has followed China in announcing it plans to end plastic
bag use in supermarkets, with its new environment minister saying on
Thursday he wants a phase-out to start by the end of 2008.
"There are some 4 billion of these plastic bags floating around the place,
getting into landfill, ending up affecting our wildlife, and showing up on
our beaches while we are on holidays," Environment Minister Peter Garrett
said on Thursday.
"I think most Australians would like to see them rid. We think it's
absolutely critical that we get cracking on it," Garrett, once president of
the Australian Conservation Foundation, told local media.
"We'd like to see a phase-out implemented by 2008," he said.
China launched a crackdown on plastic bags on Tuesday, banning production of
ultra-thin bags and forbidding their use in supermarkets and shops from June
1, 2008.
"We should encourage people to return to carrying cloth bags, using baskets
for their vegetables," China's State Council said in a notice on the
government Web site (www.gov.cn).
Chinese people use up to 3 billion plastic bags a day and the country has to
refine 5 million tonnes (37 million barrels) of crude oil every year to make
plastics used for packaging, according to a report on the Web site of China
Trade News (www.chinatradenews.com.cn).
Many countries such as Ireland and South Africa have experimented with heavy
taxes, outright bans or eliminating the thinnest plastic bags, while some
towns and cities have taken unilateral action to outlaw plastic bags.
"We've certainly had a system in place that's been voluntary up to now,
where you've got people coming into the supermarkets and they have the
opportunity to take up those canvas bags," said Garrett, whose centre-left
Labor party came to power in November.
Garrett said he would meet with the leaders of Australia's six states and
two territories in April to discuss the phasing out of plastic bags.
But it is unclear how Australia will rid itself of plastic bags, whether
like China it will issue an outright ban or like Ireland impose a levy.
Garrett said he was not personally in favour of a levy as it punished
shoppers.
"It has always been the policy of Labor to look at a total ban in 2008 and
that is what minister Garrett is doing and we totally support that," said
Clean Up Australia chairman Ian Kiernan. "But we are not in favour of a
levy."
"We know that with the Irish example there was a dramatic reduction in the
acceptance of plastic bags with the levy but that started to creep back and
it has not proved to be effective in the long term," Kiernan said. (Editing
by Jerry Norton)
Story by Michael Perry
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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