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Disposible plastic shopping bags may disappear from German stores next year under a government proposal unveiled Friday (AFP Photo/Sebastian Gollnow) |
Berlin (AFP) - Germany plans to ban single-use plastic bags from next year, joining a growing movement to fight global pollution, the environment minister said Friday.
Supermarkets
and other retailers will be barred from offering lightweight plastic carrier
bags at their checkouts, including those now marketed as being biodegradable or
being made from renewable sources instead of petroleum.
"The
vast majority of Germans want this ban," said Environment Minister Svenja
Schulze of the centre-left Social Democrats, introducing the initiative that
she hopes to soon turn into law.
Breaches of
the ban, set to take effect in the first half of next year, would threaten
businesses with fines of up to 100,000 euros ($110,000), according to a report
by Bild newspaper.
Plastic
pollution, especially in waterways and oceans, is a major ecological hazard as
it injures or kills marine and bird life, fouls beaches and creates giant
floating garbage patches in oceans.
Scientists
warn that, as plastic slowly breaks down, the micro-particles enter food chains
and end up in humans, with studies showing toxic traces in the waste of people
in Europe and Asia.
Germany's
planned move follows the 2016 introduction of a voluntary commitment by the
retail industry to no longer give plastic bags away for free.
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Plastic
waste, including single-use bags, is a growing ecological hazard
(AFP
Photo/Johannes EISELE)
|
This helped
drive a decline in use from 68 plastic bags per capita then to 24 last year,
said the ministry.
This is
already better than the EU's target of 40 bags per person per year by 2025.
Many
retailers have already phased out plastic bags altogether as consumers have
learnt to bring their own sturdy multi-use bags or nets when they go shopping.
The trade
association HDE immediately criticised the planned ban, with its managing
director Stefan Genth slamming it as "a clear breach of trust" by the
government.
Environmental
groups, meanwhile, argued the prohibition doesn't go far enough and demanded
state surcharges on all disposable bags.
This should
also cover paper bags, which degrade faster but still use up vast resources and
energy in their production, green activists say.
The planned
ban in 2020 does not cover the very thin tear-off plastic bags commonly found
at supermarket fruit and vegetable counters.
The fear is
that banning them would lead growers to pre-package fruits and greens in bulk
in plastic, which could ultimately lead to more food wastage, the ministry
said.
Under
Germany's planned law, a six-months transition period would allow retailers to
reduce their remaining stocks before the prohibition takes effect.
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