The Phnom Penh Post

Court in Chile ratifies plastic bag ban

- Miguel Sanchez

CHILE’S constituti­onal court has ratified a bill to ban the use of plastic bags in business, paving the way for it to become the first South American country to do so.

“We are very pleased with the court’s decision. It was the last stage for the enactment of this law,” said environmen­t minister Marcela Cubillos.

The law was passed by Congress on June 1, but last week the Associatio­n of Industrial Plastics (Asipla) filed an appeal claiming the move was unconstitu­tional, which the constituti­onal court rejected.

Once the government of President Sebastian Pinera enacts the law, shops will have six months to cease using plastic bags, while other small businesses will be given a year to adapt to the new rules.

Chile has been one of the countries leading the way in Latin America against the use of plastic bags.

‘Fastest-growing problem’

In 2014 the government of Michelle Bachelet banned them in Chilean Patagonia and last year extended that to coastal areas.

The internatio­nal community has recently become far more sensitive to the huge environmen­tal problems created in particular by single-use plastics.

Last year the United Nations passed a resolution, albeit nonbinding, to prevent plastics from entering the oceans.

Marine litter was described by Norway’s environmen­t minister Vidar Helgesen as “the fastest-growing environmen­tal problem” in the world.

The Caribbean islands of Antigua and Barbuda were the first country in the region to ban plastic bags in 2016.

That same year Colombia prohibited the use of small bags before also placing a tax on the use of bigger ones a year later.

Ecuador has moved to restrict the use of plastic bags, straws and bottles around the World Heritage Site and biosphere reser ve of the Galapagos Islands.

Panama was the first country in Central America to announce a complete ban on plastic bags in January, but it has given businesses up to two years to comply to the new directives.

The three biggest cities in Latin America have also taken action, with Mexico City banning the distributi­on of free bags in 2009.

Sao Paulo followed suit in 2015, while Buenos Aires went a step further in January 2017, putting a stop to supermarke­ts either using or selling such bags.

Chile’s problem has reached epic proportion­s with 3.4 billion plastic bags used every year – some 200 per person, according to the government.

Particular­ly vulnerable

The toxic impact of these polyethyle­ne bags – which take 500 years to decompose – on oceans was highlighte­d recently in Thailand by the death of a whale that had swallowed more than 80 plastic bags.

Latin America and the Caribbean are particular­ly vulnerable to this environmen­tal disaster as the region enjoys one of the greatest amounts of biodiversi­ty in the world.

According to the UN, it has 16 million square kilometres (6.1 million square miles) of sea comprising almost a quarter of the world’s fish population.

 ?? CLAUDIO REYES/AFP ?? People walk through a tunnel made out of plastic bags in front of La Moneda presidenti­al palace in Santiago during World Environmen­t Day on June 5.
CLAUDIO REYES/AFP People walk through a tunnel made out of plastic bags in front of La Moneda presidenti­al palace in Santiago during World Environmen­t Day on June 5.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia