The Borneo Post

Ban on use of plastic bags to be enforced in stages — Ministry

- By Peter Boon reporters@theborneop­ost.com

We are trying to implement this initiative in stages, starting from city and municipal councils, of which the smaller councils are encouraged to emulate from.

SIBU: The Ministry of Local Government and Housing may implement the ban on the usage of plastic bags in stages – starting from the city and municipal council levels.

In this regard, Assistant Minister of Local Government Datu Dr Penguang Manggil believes that self- discipline is vital in ensuring the success of any green initiative such as the ‘no plastic’ campaign.

“We are trying to implement this initiative in stages, starting from city and municipal councils, of which the smaller councils are encouraged to emulate from,” he said in a statement yesterday, made in response to a question about the ministry having any plan to encourage other councils to follow the examples set by local authoritie­s such as Sibu Municipal Council ( SMC) in implementi­ng the ‘no plastic bag’ policy.

It is known that since the ‘Say No to Plastic Bags 2.0’ campaign kicked off on Jan 1 this year, many retail operations here are no longer providing customers with free plastic bags.

“The responsibi­lity to protect our environmen­t is a collective

Datu Dr Penguang Manggil, Assistant Minister of Local Government

responsibi­lity; hence, we must adopt a fi rst-world mentality.

“Informal education in changing our attitudes of not using plastic bags or avoiding it altogether, is very important. It is cheaper to do it now before it is too late,” said Penguang, who is Marudi assemblyma­n.

Based on a survey conducted in 2010 involving major towns across Sarawak, food and food perishable­s accounted for 35 per cent from the total tonnage of waste, followed by paper at 19 per cent, soft plastics (11 per cent), hard plastics (five per cent), garden waste (five per cent), disposable diapers (five per cent), glass (three per cent) and wood (two per cent) – the remaining percentage comprised discarded metals and constructi­on waste.

It is also known that environmen­tal non-government­al organisati­on (NGO) Sahabat Alam Malaysia (SAM) has made similar calls on doing away with singleuse plastics as the fi rst step to deal with plastic pollution.

SAM president SM Mohamed Idris was quoted in a statement on Thursday as saying that one of the most visible impacts of plastic pollution on marine life was the ingestion of plastic debris, as well as suffocatio­n and entangleme­nt of hundreds of marine species including birds, turtles, fish, mussels, crustacean­s and marine mammals.

 ??  ?? Datu Dr Penguang Manggil
Datu Dr Penguang Manggil

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