Bangkok Post

Plastic not fantastic: ‘End the reliance’

State agencies mull ways to curb usage

- APINYA WIPATAYOTI­N

The Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmen­t and 11 other ministries expressed interest yesterday, at an event marking World Environmen­t Day, in reducing the use of plastic bags and polystyren­e foam in their offices.

This year the day was running under the theme of “Beat Plastic Pollution”. Some 800 participan­ts attended yesterday’s event in Bangkok, which was organised by the Department of Environmen­tal Quality.

Wijarn Simachaya, permanent secretary of the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmen­t, said government offices should serve as role models for businesses and the public by leading by example and creating public awareness of how changing patterns of behaviour and consumptio­n can easily lessen our reliance on plastics.

This follows a cabinet resolution dated Jan 23 that ordered several ministries including his and the Interior Ministry, as well as a number of other agencies, to launch a campaign to reduce the use of plastics in both the public and private sector.

Plastics are seen as posing a threat because such waste does not degrade easily and harms the environmen­t both on land and at sea — as highlighte­d in recent days by the case of a pilot whale that washed up in a Thai canal in the far South and was found to have ingested 80 black plastic bags, considered a major contributi­ng factor in its death.

According to Gen Surasak Kanjanarat, the minister of natural resources, measures are urgently needed to reduce the amount of plastic bags Thai people use and announced that the ministry will order the Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservati­on and the Zoological Park Organisati­on to ban plastic bag use in all 154 national parks and at state-owned zoos countrywid­e.

The ministry will meet with officials from the Bangkok Metropolit­an Administra­tion and discuss ways of reducing the use of plastic bags at fresh markets, he said.

It will also talk with the Ministry of Finance to see how business operators can cash in by developing more ecofriendl­y alternativ­es for use at local markets, he added.

The ministry hosts an event to mark World Environmen­t Day every June 5.

This day was establishe­d by the United Nations Environmen­t Programme (Unep) 45 years ago and it has adopted a different, or at least rotating, theme each year.

This year the Unep wants to make the world community better understand the threat plastics pose to marine ecological systems worldwide and has adopted the motto: “If you can’t reuse it, refuse it.”

An estimated 500 billion plastic bags are used globally each year. Thais use eight each a day or 8.7 in Bangkok, figures show.

Thailand creates 27 million tonnes of garbage per year, 43% of which is properly managed. Around 13 million tonnes seeps into the sea.

Pawin Talerngsri, a member of the national reform committee on natural resources and the environmen­t, said more legal measures are needed to reduce plastic waste.

He called for a law ordering department stores to charge their customers for plastic bags, as is the case in Taiwan and Europe.

Within five years separating garbage at home in the interests of recycling will be a legal requiremen­t, he added.

 ?? PAWAT LAOPAISARN­TAKSIN ?? Shoppers walk past an artwork crafted from plastic on show at ‘Beat Plastic Pollution — If You Can’t Reuse, Refuse It’, an event which runs until tomorrow at CentralWor­ld shopping complex to mark World Environmen­t Day yesterday.
PAWAT LAOPAISARN­TAKSIN Shoppers walk past an artwork crafted from plastic on show at ‘Beat Plastic Pollution — If You Can’t Reuse, Refuse It’, an event which runs until tomorrow at CentralWor­ld shopping complex to mark World Environmen­t Day yesterday.

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