Daily Sabah (Turkey)

PLASTIC BAG CHARGE BRINGS EARNINGS, BOOSTS ANTI-POLLUTION CAMPAIGN

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HAZAL ATEŞ

CHARGING customers for plastic bags, a practice introduced two years ago, has paid off. Environmen­t and Urban Planning Minister Murat Kurum said the initiative helped decrease plastic bag use by up to 80% and that the government has accumulate­d over TL 23 million ($3.16 million) from its share of the “recycling rate” fee.

“WE ACHIEVED important gains, but most significan­t among them, is a change in people’s habits. The number of plastic bags used yearly decreased to 2.5 billion from 30 billion two years ago,” Minister of Environmen­t and Urban Planning Murat Kurum said in an interview, pledging that the practice would remain in force.

Supermarke­ts and other businesses started charging customers TL 0.25 on Jan. 1, 2019, under new government regulation to complement the ambitious Zero Waste project. The Ministry of Treasury and Finance received TL 0.15 from each bag and this number has now been raised to TL 0.19. Last year, the ministry collected more than TL 1 million from 23 million bags sold to customers.

“We see a decreasing demand for plastic bags, especially in supermarke­t chains. In parallel with this, the production rate for polyethyle­ne packaging (plastic bags) dropped to 900 million kilos from 1.4 billion kilos last year,” Kurum says.

After the success of the regulation, the government last year introduced the next step in its recycling and savings plan. Tires, batteries, vegetable oils, electric appliances and medicine can now be recycled for free.

In 2019, the average person used 440 plastic bags annually. An estimated 5 trillion plastic bags are used worldwide every year, contributi­ng to maritime pollution as some 8 million tons of plastic, including bags, are dumped into the ocean every year, killing marine life and entering the human food chain, according to a United Nations report on the issue.

Though low, the price of plastic bags has led consumers to look for other ways to carry their purchased goods, and some municipali­ties distribute free canvas bags to shoppers.

 ??  ?? Women walk on İstiklal Avenue while COVID-19 measures are in place, Taksim, Istanbul, Turkey, Feb. 17, 2021. (Photo by Getty Images)
Women walk on İstiklal Avenue while COVID-19 measures are in place, Taksim, Istanbul, Turkey, Feb. 17, 2021. (Photo by Getty Images)
 ??  ?? Minister of Environmen­t and Urban Planning Murat Kurum delivers canvas bags to locals in Karabük, northern Turkey, Jan. 5, 2019.
Minister of Environmen­t and Urban Planning Murat Kurum delivers canvas bags to locals in Karabük, northern Turkey, Jan. 5, 2019.

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