China Daily (Hong Kong)

Charitable run

- By ANGUS MCNEICE in London angus@mail.chinadaily­uk.com Drastic measures

A team of environmen­talists last month surprised hundreds of visitors to the Sainsbury’s supermarke­t in Walthamsto­w, East London.

At the store exit, five Greenpeace campaigner­s took bags from bemused (yet willing) shoppers and rifled through them.

The team removed almost all packaging, freeing fresh fruit from flimsy polyethyle­ne sacks and liberating cucumbers from cellophane. They transferre­d the groceries from plastic shopping bags into fully recycled “bags for life”.

Shoppers then continued on their way into the parking lot, walking below a sign reading “Give supermarke­ts back their pointless plastic today”.

“The attention on plastics is not going away, and Greenpeace supporters are helping put supermarke­ts’ excessive use of plastic packaging at the heart of the debate on ocean plastics,” said Greenpeace UK Oceans campaigner Elena Polisano.

Plastic has been a hot topic in the United Kingdom and wider Europe since, exactly one year ago, China stopped accepting plastic waste imports on environmen­tal grounds.

Widespread reporting on the import ban revealed to Britons that over a quarter of plastic rubbish from their homes was not getting processed domestical­ly — it was being sent to China.

And a few months prior to the ban, the BBC documentar­y Blue Planet II woke the world up to the problem of plastic pollution in our oceans.

One of the most visible offenders of the world’s plastic crisis — the single-use shopping bag — is currently in the crosshairs in Europe.

Last month, both Austria and Denmark announced plans for an outright ban on bags, following a similar announceme­nt by the Hungarian government in September.

And last week, the European Union directed its 28 member states to reduce the use of plastic bags to an average of 40 a year per person by 2026 — and to raise total plastic recycling rates to 55 percent by 2030.

The UK is now exploring plans to achieve this goal by doubling the levy on plastic bags to 10 pence (13 US cents) a bag. In 2015, the UK introduced a 5 pence charge which has since seen plastic bag sales in major supermarke­ts drop by 86 percent.

The EU first released a directive to reduce plastic bag usage in 2015. A study from the European Commission found that the average European used 200 plastic bags in 2010. That year, Europeans used 100 billion plastic bags, and threw away 80 billion of them.

Around 4.5 billion of those bags ended up in landfill or waterways, littering the beaches of the Mediterran­ean and clogging the English Channel, where debris exists at a density of 100 items every square kilometer.

To combat this throwaway culture, four years ago, the EU directed member states to reduce plastic bag use to 90 bags a year per person by 2019. Since then, every EU country has introduced some form of plastic bag legislatio­n.

Twenty-one countries now charge for bags. Italy, Romania and France have banned bags outright, while two of Belgium’s three regions — Brussels and Walloon — have also introduced a ban.

A further three countries — Austria, Denmark and Hungary — have announced plans to ban bags.

For some nations, the directive was easy to follow. In Denmark and Finland, the average person only used 4 bags in 2010, thanks to existing legislatio­n, while Italy had already banned plastic bags in 2012.

For nations with high rates of usage, like Portugal and Hungary, where the average person used 466 bags in 2010, the change was drastic. Portugal introduced a charge on bags in 2015, and the use of plastic bags in supermarke­ts plummeted by 90 percent the following year.

Hungarians now use an average of 80 bags each year after a bag charge came in, and the government has announced plans for an outright ban by 2021.

The EU has come down on some nations that have failed to effect change. In October 2017, the European Commission noted that Romania and Croatia had taken no steps to reduce usage, and threatened to refer both nations to the European Court of Justice. The countries have since introduced charges on plastic bags.

With plastic bags increasing­ly being phased out around the continent, Europe has now set its sight on reducing a wider range of single-use plastics.

“The EU is taking action to restrict the use of certain throwaway plastic products for which good plastic-free alternativ­es exist,” said Elisabeth Kostinger, the Austrian Federal Minister of Sustainabi­lity and Tourism. “And we will make plastic producers pay for cleaning up.”

Come 2021, plastic cutlery, plates, cups, straws, fast food containers, cotton bud sticks, and micro beads will all be banned in the EU.

 ?? TIMOTHY A. CLARY/ AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ??
TIMOTHY A. CLARY/ AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

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