Jamaica Gleaner

Ban on plastic lunch boxes June 1

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THE TARGET date for the ban on plastic lunch boxes and personalca­re products with microplast­ic beads is June 1.

This was announced by Minister without Portfolio in the Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation, Senator Matthew Samuda, during his presentati­on in the State of the Nation Debate in the Senate, on January 19.

“We have taken the lesson of the first round of the plastic ban as it relates to public education and need to give sufficient lead time,” the minister said.

Additional­ly, he said the developmen­t of a national policy on the environmen­tal sound management of single use plastic products is to be done this coming fiscal year.

“The ... prime minister has also announced, already, ahead of his Budget Debate, that he has directed that a programme aimed at the separation of plastics and other recyclable­s in the ministries, department­s, and agencies commence this fiscal year,” the minister said.

Senator Samuda said that Jamaica currently collects more than 30 per cent of the plastic bottles produced monthly.

“We commend the NSWMA (National Solid Waste Management Authority) and Recycling Partners of Jamaica, who have achieved this up from eight per cent three years ago,” he said.

“We are in a race against time to ensure that we improve our waste-management target, and one of the ways … is to ensure we extract plastic waste from the waste stream. We will continue to work with stakeholde­rs to determine the appropriat­e legislatio­n necessary to achieve our goal. Our goal is not less than 70 per cent of all plastic being produced monthly to be collected and recycled for the benefit of Jamaica, ”Senator Samuda added.

He said Jamaica is actively participat­ing in negotiatio­ns for a legally binding instrument on plastic pollution.

“In essence, the Paris Agreement relates to pollution, and specifical­ly, plastic. Now, we don’t know where those negotiatio­ns will end up. We, obviously, have some insight as to where they are, but it is our intention in Jamaica to make sure that whenever that is agreed, we are ahead of targets and able to sign and ratify almost immediatel­y once that is agreed,” the minister said.

He added that the fight to halt biodiversi­ty loss and to tame pollution will be underpinne­d this year by a significan­t increase of fines both in the Natural Resources Conservati­on Authority (NRCA) and Wildlife Protection Acts, with additional details to be provided by Prime Minister Holness in his Budget Debate presentati­on.

Samuda said the Government, through the Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation, is currently pursuing amendments to several pieces of subsidiary legislatio­n under the NRCA Act, namely the Air Quality Regulation­s and the Wastewater and Sludge Regulation­s.

Also, he said the Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation will be working with its agencies, including the National Environmen­t and Planning Agency, in the promulgati­on of the outstandin­g Environmen­tal Impact Assessment Regulation­s under the NRCA Act in the 2024/25 fiscal year.

 ?? FILE ?? Senator Matthew Samuda, minister without portfolio in the Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation.
FILE Senator Matthew Samuda, minister without portfolio in the Ministry of Economic Growth and Job Creation.

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