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Companies that break New Zealand's plastic bag ban will face heavy penalties (AFP Photo/Drew Angerer) |
Wellington (AFP) - New Zealand officially banned single-use plastic shopping bags Monday, introducing hefty fines for businesses that continue to provide them.
Plastic
pollution has become a growing global concern, with a million birds and more
than 100,000 marine mammals injured or killed every year by becoming entangled
in packaging or ingesting it through the food chain.
Companies
that break New Zealand's ban will face heavy penalties, including fines of up
to NZ$100,000 ($67,000).
"New
Zealanders are proud of our country's clean, green reputation and want to help
ensure we live up to it," environment minister Eugenie Sage said.
"Ending
the use of single-use plastic shopping bags helps do that."
Under the
new rules, thin plastic single-use shopping bags can no longer be supplied --
but the law allows reusable carriers to continue being provided.
The
legislation -- which was announced in August last year and came into force on
Monday -- will have little practical effect, as New Zealand's major
supermarkets have already voluntarily banned the bags.
However,
Sage said it was putting the issue of recycling on the agenda.
"(The
ban) doesn't go far enough, but what is really great is it's started the
conversation," she told Radio New Zealand.
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A million
birds and more than 100,000 marine mammals worldwide are injured
or killed
every year by plastic packaging (AFP Photo/Silke Struckenbrock)
|
"People
are now talking about single-use plastics and how we can phase them out."
Britain's
Royal Statistical Society estimates 90.5 percent of all plastic waste -- some
6,300 million metric tons -- has never been recycled and is either in landfill
or accumulating in the natural environment.
If current
production and waste management trends continue, the ocean of plastic waste is
estimated to almost double to 12,000 million metric tons by 2050.
More than
80 countries have already introduced bag bans similar to New Zealand's,
according to the UN Environment Programme.
While it
praised such initiatives, it said more needed to be done to minimise other
sources of plastic waste including microbeads and single-use items such as
straws.
Canada last
month announced plans to ban disposable plastic items such as straws, cutlery
and stir sticks from 2021.
The Pacific
nation of Vanuatu will implement a ban in December on disposable diapers, which
not only have non-biodegradable plastic linings but also use chemical
absorbents which leach into the environment.
Sage said
the New Zealand government was committing NZ$40 million ($27 million) to find
ways to reuse plastic waste instead of sending it to landfill overseas.
"We
have been sending our waste offshore for too long," she said.
"China
and other countries refusing to take our waste is the wake-up call we
need."
The issue
of wealthy developed nations using poorer countries as trash dumps was
highlighted this week when Canada had to accept back tonnes of rubbish it
shipped to the Philippines years ago.
For years,
China received the bulk of scrap plastic from around the world, but closed its
doors to foreign refuse last year in an effort to clean up its environment.
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