The Sun (Malaysia)

Can plastic bags be sustainabl­e?

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PLASTIC bags are getting a sustainabl­e makeover, courtesy of the global initiative Fashion for Good.

The organisati­on, together with several major brands including Adidas, C&A, Kering, Otto Group and PVH Corp, has launched ‘The Circular Polybag Pilot’, which aims to “close the loop” when it comes to polybags.

The pilot scheme, which will run for around three to five months from early 2020, involves using post-consumer polybag waste to create new polybags, with the help of a patented technology from the Spanish-based company Cadel Deinking. The technology produces high-quality LowDensity Polyethyle­ne (LDPE) pellets from post-consumer polybag waste, which can, in turn, be used to manufactur­e new polybags.

The fashion giants backing the trial will supply large quantities of post-consumer polybag waste,

Fashion for Good has announced. This will be turned into pellets and new polybags, which the partners will re-integrate into the supply chain.

According to Fashion For Good, around 180 billion polybags are produced every year to store, transport and protect fashion items, with fewer than 15% of those in circulatio­n collected for recycling.

Plastic bags have come under fire from fashion retailers looking to boost their sustainabi­lity efforts recently – earlier this year, Aldo Group announced plans to phase out single-use shopping bags completely, replacing them with shoebox bags made from recycled cardboard.

The Japanese lifestyle brand Muji also introduced a charge for reusable bags in its US stores, and the Spanish retail giant Inditex has pledged to eliminate the use of plastic bags across its brand portfolio by the year 2020. – AFPRelaxne­ws

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