Journal Pioneer

N.S. ‘seriously considerin­g’ ban: environmen­t minister

- BY BRETT BUNDALE

Nova Scotia’s environmen­t minister says he’s “seriously considerin­g’’ enacting a provincewi­de ban on plastic shopping bags – a move that would make it the first province to do so.

Iain Rankin said he was looking at all options to reduce the use of so-called film plastics, including an outright ban or fee on plastic bags.

“Everything is on the table,’’ he told reporters Thursday after a Liberal government cabinet meeting. “We have to reduce the amount of plastics we use in the province.’’

Rankin said he has held “important discussion­s’’ with solid waste representa­tives in every region of the province and that the government will make a decision “in due time.’’ Earlier this month, Rankin granted Halifax temporary permission to dump plastic in its landfill as the city scrambled to dispose of its plastic waste when its only market - China dried up.

Rankin says the six-month measure could be extended, though plastic will remain banned from the province’s landfills.

Halifax council voted this week to examine banning plastic bags within the municipali­ty.

Mayor Mike Savage is also expected to write a letter to Nova Scotia’s premier expressing the city’s preference for a provincial ban.

“Eventually, I think we will ban plastic bags,’’ Savage said in an interview. “I think it’s a matter of time for municipali­ties and provinces everywhere.’’ The Retail Council of Canada has said that while a ban is not its preferred option to reduce plastic, it said a provincewi­de ban would be preferable to having a patchwork of different rules in municipali­ties across Nova Scotia.

“It’s incumbent on me to listen to what Nova Scotians want to do, especially the business community and the municipali­ties,’’ Rankin said. “Some of our stakeholde­rs prefer a provincewi­de approach (to banning plastic) so we’re very seriously considerin­g that.’’

With both the province’s largest municipali­ty and the retail associatio­n expressing support for a plastic bag ban, it appears Nova Scotia could be the first province in Canada to ban the single-use plastic bags. “We’re a leader in how we manage solid waste,’’ Savage said. “I think we want to continue to be.’’

From composting to switching to clear garbage bags, he said there is always criticism to change and people that don’t agree.

“Each of those things have worked very well for the municipali­ty,’’ Savage said. “It doesn’t mean that people are wrong to be opposed to them but it does mean they had a positive impact on our community.’’ However, a ban on plastic shopping bags doesn’t address all film plastics, which includes cereal box liners and the wrapping around products like toilet paper, water bottles or juice. The environmen­t minister said the province is also examining extended producer responsibi­lity, a policy that makes the producers of goods responsibl­e for the end-cost of disposing packaging. The concept is intended to encourage manufactur­ers to reduce packaging and make it more environmen­tally friendly, while keeping more materials out of the landfill.

 ?? BRAD WORKS/JOURNAL PIONEER ?? Nova Scotia is considerin­g a ban on plastic shopping bags. If it goes forward with a ban it would be the first province in Canada to do so.
BRAD WORKS/JOURNAL PIONEER Nova Scotia is considerin­g a ban on plastic shopping bags. If it goes forward with a ban it would be the first province in Canada to do so.

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