Truro News

P.E.I. passes bill banning single-use plastic bags

- BY ALEX COOKE

Prince Edward Island could be the first province in Canada to ban retailers from giving out plastic bags after a private member’s bill passed third reading Friday.

The Plastic Bag Reduction Act, introduced by Liberal member of the legislatur­e Allen Roach, would eventually prohibit retailers from providing customers with single-use plastic bags, encouragin­g them instead to sell paper or reusable cloth bags.

“The purpose of this Act is to reduce the use by businesses of single-use checkout bags, to reduce waste and environmen­tal damage and to promote respon- sible and sustainabl­e business practices in Prince Edward Island,” the bill reads.

The change would come in phases, with retailers beginning to charge customers 15 cents per plastic bag on July 1. The fee would increase to 25 cents in July 2019, before becoming an outright ban in January 2020, after which businesses could face fines for giving away plastic bags.

Jackie Bourgeois of the Southeast Environmen­tal Associatio­n supports the bill, saying singleuse plastics wreak havoc on Canada’s waterways and marine life.

“All you have to do is go on the internet and you can see the disastrous videos of bags that are being removed from these big huge animals out in the ocean, and it’s really just a tragedy that it’s happening,” she said.

According to Greenpeace Canada, Canadians generate about 3.25 million tonnes of plastic garbage each year, which the environmen­tal group says could fill 140,000 garbage trucks.

As well, the federal government says more than 150 million tonnes of plastic waste is clogging the oceans worldwide, and it’s estimated that plastic could outweigh fish by 2050.

Bourgeois hopes other provinces will follow the Island’s lead in discouragi­ng the use of plastic bags.

“We’re small, but we can lead the way in a lot of things,” she said. “If this move encourages others to follow, then that’s great.”

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