The Borneo Post

Kenya bans use of plastic bags in bid to fight pollution

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NAIROBI: A ban on plastic bags came into force in Kenya last Monday in a bid to slow pollution, with offenders liable to jail time or hefty fines.

The ban on the use, manufactur­e and importatio­n of plastic carrier bags was carried through after the High Court threw out a challenge brought by importers who claim jobs will be lost and livelihood­s threatened.

Dozens of countries have either restricted, banned outright or imposed levies for the use of plastic bags but Kenya’s new law is particular­ly tough, with fines of up to US$ 38,000 ( RM170,000) and four-year prison sentences.

The UN Environmen­t Programme ( UNEP) estimates that Kenyan supermarke­ts hand out as many as 100 million plastic bags every year.

UNEP head Erik Solheim greeted the ban as “a huge, important step” to ending plastic pollution.

The ban was first announced in February but suspended for six months to allow Kenyan consumers and shopkeeper­s to adjust to the new rules.

Kenya’s National Environmen­t Management Agency ( NEMA) took out ads in newspapers clarifying that while plastic carrier bags were banned, neither industrial manufactur­ers producing plastic-wrapped goods nor users of plastic bin liners will fall foul of the law.

In Kenya, road verges are commonly covered with discarded plastic bags and trees festooned with them, they block drains and are ingested by animals, including livestock such as cows and goats.

Environmen­talists say the damage is worse still at sea where island- sized gyres of garbage float about and fish starve to death, their stomachs filled with plastic waste.

The Retail Trade Associatio­n of Kenya said supermarke­t chains plan to provide reuseable, eco-friendly bags at a small price.

“We are subsidisin­g the cost for the benefit of the consumer,” said Willy Kimani, director of the trade group and an executive at the Naivas supermarke­t chain.

Hours after the ban took effect on Monday there was confusion and long queues at supermarke­ts where shoppers were forced to carry goods in boxes or in their arms as the piles of plastic bags that used to hang at the end of checkout counters disappeare­d overnight.

Some Kenyans took to social media sites to complain of overzealou­s police stopping vehicles in downtown Nairobi and searching them for plastic bags and, they alleged, bribes.

This is the third time in a decade that Kenya has tried to impose a plastic bag ban but they are such a visible blight that the ban has widespread support despite the disruption. — AFP

 ??  ?? A man carrying used plastic containers which he will sell walks across the Ngong town dumping site, some 30 kilometres south-west of Nairobi on Aug 24. — AFP photos
A man carrying used plastic containers which he will sell walks across the Ngong town dumping site, some 30 kilometres south-west of Nairobi on Aug 24. — AFP photos
 ??  ?? Worker at an abatoir in the Kenyan capital Nairobi, prepare to extract bowels from slaughtere­d animals on Aug 23 before they are delivered for inspection for plastic waste.
Worker at an abatoir in the Kenyan capital Nairobi, prepare to extract bowels from slaughtere­d animals on Aug 23 before they are delivered for inspection for plastic waste.

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