Khaleej Times

Malaysian shoppers paid to cut plastic waste

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kuala lumpur — British supermarke­t group Tesco has launched a scheme in Malaysia based on bags with barcodes, giving customers discounts on their shopping every time they reuse the bags.

The “unforgetta­ble bag” was launched in 11 Tesco stores in Malaysia’s capital Kuala Lumpur and the southern state of Johor on Tuesday in an effort to shift away from single-use plastic bags and reduce waste.

Azliza Baizura Azmel, a director at Tesco Malaysia, said 70 per cent of customers have their own carrier bags but leave them in the car rather than bringing them into the store.

“That’s why we thought of the idea of the unforgetta­ble bag — it’s a bit of a push for them,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

The new bags will be sold for 0.50 ringgit ($0.13) each, and customers will get a free replacemen­t if the bag is torn or damaged. Tesco will offer customers a cash rebate of 0.20 ringgit ($0.05) for every bag reused.

Each year between 500 billion and 1 trillion plastic bags are used globally, according to industry estimates, with fewer than 10 per cent recycled. Many end up in the world’s oceans or dumped in landfill.

More than 8 million tonnes of plastics enter the ocean each year, and marine experts fear

8M tonnes of plastics enter the ocean each year

there could be more plastic than fish in the ocean by 2050, measured by weight.

Plastic degrades over time into tiny particles which are ingested by marine life, harming the food chain and environmen­t.

In an attempt to cut down on waste and single-use plastic, many supermarke­ts around the world charge customers for plastic bags, promote reusable bags, and offer free recycling services.

Meanwhile, more than 40 countries have banned, partly banned or taxed single-use plastic bags, including parts of Malaysia and India, China, France, Rwanda, Italy and Kenya.

The “unforgetta­ble bag” is made from a recyclable plastic that is more durable than convention­al plastic bags, Tesco said, and sports a turtle, fish or whale design to highlight the risks plastic waste poses to sea creatures. The Tesco trial — the first of its kind by a major hypermarke­t in Malaysia — limits the bag discounts to two per transactio­n.

The scheme will be extended to all Tesco’s 56 stores in Malaysia from June 1. — Reuters

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