Stabroek News Sunday

Shoppers not giving up on plastic bags despite pollution hazard

-Mattai in ongoing drive to push alternativ­es

- By Dreylan Johnson

Although government recently announced its decision to consider a ban on single-use plastics, a change of culture rather than a change in policy may be what is first needed to tackle plastic pollution.

While the government prepares to deliberate on the latest strategy in its agenda to achieve a green economy, at least one local supermarke­t has been fighting behind the scenes for years to reshape the habits of its customer base by encouragin­g the use of reusable bags over single-use plastic ones.

But supermarke­t owner Harry Mattai can attest to the adage that old habits die hard.

Mattai related to Sunday Stabroek that over the years he has employed a number of methods to reduce plastic bag use among his customers, including imposing a tax on single-use plastic, offering shoppers used plastic bags (bags returned by customers, which he said they refused), and distributi­ng reusable shopping bags.

“Over a period of years; in the last two to three years, we brought in and gave away approximat­ely over 20,000 reusable shopping bags…not a single customer have come back with those bags and reused them,” Mattai, the proprietor of N&S Mattai and Company, related during a recent interview with this newspaper.

“…What we experience…is that it doesn’t matter what tax, what added value you put to the grocery shopping bags…I’ve done it all—I’ve done the survey and all the tests done on the shopping bags and it’s still not working,” he stated, before adding that what they do know is that “if the customers have to pay for it, they’ll pay for it.”

In Guyana, the use of single-use plastic bags for shopping is embedded in the culture. It is likely that a trip to any retail store around the city, be it a supermarke­t, department store, or a corner shop, will see customers being offered plastic bags to accommodat­e their purchases. If it is not offered, they will likely request it.

Mattai acknowledg­ed that while some of his customers now bring along reusable bags, they use them only as a supplement to the plastic bags.

“…Presently, what we experience is the customers are coming with their bags in their purses or in their cars, but they still want to put it in a plastic bag and then put it in the bag,” he related, before adding that customers often have another request—that their groceries be placed in black plastic bags specifical­ly.

Mattai’s Supermarke­t has since began importing biodegrada­ble shopping bags, branded, “Mattai’s Earth Friendly Lifestyle,” with a nudge for customers to “GO GREEN” and a reminder that the bags are biodegrada­ble and compostabl­e.

“…With the biodegrada­ble shopping bags, it still didn’t help; but the only satisfacti­on to that biodegrada­ble shopping bags is that in your heart you know that it will break up in the soil. With that in mind, we find our customers still want their bags doubled, still want extra bags. In a case like that we don’t mind giving them because they use it for their garbage, and it goes back into the earth,” he explained.

Mattai related that as far as he is aware, the biodegrada­ble shopping bags do not come in black, like the bags that are popularly requested. However, as a result of customers’ shopping habits (requesting that bags be doubled), the supermarke­t is sometimes forced to go into its “plastic bag reserve,” which consists of the non-biodegrada­ble product.

Mattai estimated that the supermarke­t distribute­s an average of 1,500 shopping bags a day. Mattai’s supermarke­t is certainly not the largest retail distributo­r in Guyana, nor is it part of a chain, giving an indication of the high plastic bag consumptio­n rate locally.

“…Those bags are costing us between $5 to $6 for one. We are not passing on that cost to the consumer, we are not. But in the last

four months, we are trying to cut down on the bags that we give the consumers by educating them and saying, listen, this bag is strong enough; you don’t need to double them. And they see it…,” he stated.

Cardboard boxes

Another strategy that the supermarke­t has utilised to encourage shoppers to give up their plastic habit, is offering to pack groceries into empty cardboard boxes.

The area near the supermarke­t’s exit now houses a large, rectangula­r wooden box, into which those cardboard boxes are packed.

“So what happens now is that when you come to shop our staff will ask you, ‘Do you want boxes or bags?’ So that helped to take out some of the plastic bags out of the landfill, or less using of the bags—but still, that’s not the solution. The solution is that, I feel, that once the shopping bags—these white bags, these black bags and all these plastic bags are banned or stop coming to the country, the people themselves, the Guyanese public, will take that initiative of coming out and bringing their bags,” Mattai opined.

Mattai explained that his passion for the cause, which is shared by his family, comes from having seen firsthand the destructio­n that plastics cause to the environmen­t. He noted that he himself utilises reusable shopping bags on his shopping trips.

“I, personally, anywhere I go, I take a shopping bag with me…if I have to buy my tablets, I don’t need a bag…if I have to go get a pastry, I don’t need a bag; I go to buy a shirt, I tell them I don’t need a bag. And, of course, you go to the stores, the people look at you and say, ‘No, why not take a bag?’ But by time you get home with it, you add it to the volume of bags that you have,” he reasoned.

In Georgetown, plastic waste clogs the drainage system on account of poor disposal practices, leading to flooding in some places. In Guyana on the whole,

 ??  ?? Harry Mattai displays one of the supermarke­t’s reusable shopping bags. The bags, which come in two sizes (the larger one is featured in the photo above) are sold for between $100 and $150.
Harry Mattai displays one of the supermarke­t’s reusable shopping bags. The bags, which come in two sizes (the larger one is featured in the photo above) are sold for between $100 and $150.
 ??  ?? The area at N&S Mattai which stores the cardboard boxes offered to customers, as an alternativ­e to using shopping bags to pack groceries.
The area at N&S Mattai which stores the cardboard boxes offered to customers, as an alternativ­e to using shopping bags to pack groceries.

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