Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

EMA revokes kaylite reprieve

- Paidamoyo Chipunza Harare Bureau

SUPERMARKE­TS and restaurant­s are in a quandary after the Environmen­tal Management Authority (EMA), revoked a three-month reprieve earlier given to expanded polystyren­e ( kaylites) users following their failure to stick to agreed conditions.

The latest developmen­t has seen EMA confiscati­ng all kaylites from users with immediate effect.

Some restaurant­s that had not yet switched to alternativ­es were yesterday overwhelme­d by the number of sit in clients with some customers resorting to using lunch boxes, paper plates and plastic bags to take away their lunch meals.

These, some consumers said, compromise­d on hygiene and service standards.

In an interview, EMA education and publicity officer Mr Steady Kangata, confirmed the developmen­t saying users were allowed to continue using kaylites for a period of three months from the day of the ban provided they ensured the kaylites would not be a menace to the environmen­t during that period.

“They were supposed to come up with a plan aimed at finding ways of picking up kaylites through community based organisati­ons so that the kaylites would not be a menace to the environmen­t. So, we have been monitoring compliance since this agreement was reached, but they have failed to ensure a kaylite free environmen­t hence the move by EMA to implement the ban,” said Mr Kangata.

“Teams are busy monitoring all supermarke­ts, restaurant­s and fast foods outlets and should we find any kaylites, we are confiscati­ng in situ. This means we are not taking the confiscate­d kaylites with us, but we count them together with the users and leave them but we expect to see them in the same numbers on our next monitoring visit. If we find them short, it means they have been used meaning the user in question is liable to a prescribed fine,” said Mr Kangata.

He, however, said most restaurant­s, supermarke­ts and fast foods have since switched to alternativ­e packaging.

Government, through EMA in July activated Statutory Instrument 84 of 2012, Environmen­tal Management (Plastic Packaging and Plastic bottles) (Amendment) Regulation­s, which banned the manufactur­e, importatio­n and commercial distributi­on of polystyren­e for use in Zimbabwe.

Apart from being an environmen­tal menace, EMA argued that the kaylites also had effects on health, some which lead to cancers.

But after presentati­ons from kaylite users, EMA had given them a three months reprieve, which started on July 17, 2017 to wind up their operations on the condition that they ensure that the environmen­t is kept clean of kaylites.

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