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Consumers will have to pay extra for all straws, plastic shopping bags, disposable utensils and beverage cups from 2025 |
TAIPEI
(AFP) Taiwan is
planning a blanket ban on single-use plastic items including straws, cups and
shopping bags by 2030, officials said Thursday, with restaurants facing new
restrictions from next year.
It is the
latest push by Taiwan to cut waste and pollution after introducing a recycling
programme and charges for plastic bags.
The
island's eco-drive has also extended to limiting the use of incense at temples
and festivals to protect public health.
Its new
plan will force major chain restaurants to stop providing plastic straws for
in-store use from 2019, a requirement that will expand to all dining outlets in
2020.
Consumers
will have to pay extra for all straws, plastic shopping bags, disposable
utensils and beverage cups from 2025, ahead of a full ban on the single-use
items five years later, according to the road map from the government's
Environmental Protection Administration (EPA).
"We
aim to implement a blanket ban by 2030 to significantly reduce plastic waste
that pollutes the ocean and also gets into the food chain to affect human
health," said Lai Ying-ying, an EPA official supervising the new
programme.
According
to Lai, a Taiwanese person on average uses 700 plastic bags annually. The EPA
aims to reduce the number to 100 by 2025 and to zero by 2030.
The
government has already banned free plastic shopping bags in major retail
outlets including supermarkets and convenience stores, expanding the move to
smaller businesses including bakeries and drinks kiosks from this year.
The island
started recycling plastic and pushing to reduce single-use plastic items more
than a decade ago.
Last year,
nearly 200,000 tonnes of plastic containers were recycled, the EPA said.
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