Houston Chronicle

Canada latest to outlaw single-use plastics

- By Dan Bilefsky

Canada on Monday joined a growing global movement with a plan to ban single-use plastics blighting the environmen­t.

Announcing the ban next to a lake at the picturesqu­e Gault Nature Reserve in Mont Saint-Hilaire, outside Montreal, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he wanted his children to be able to play on the beach or swim in a lake without having their memories interrupte­d by dead birds or fish killed by pollution.

“People have had enough of seeing their parks and beaches covered with plastic,” he said. “As parents, we’re at a point when we take our kids to the beach and we have to search out a patch of sand that isn’t littered with straws, Styrofoam or bottles. That’s a problem, one that we have to do something about.”

The World Economic Forum estimates that 90 percent of the plastic ending up in the oceans comes from 10 major rivers and that there is 50 million tons of plastic in the world’s oceans. Environmen­tal experts say plastic bags can take centuries to degrade.

Canada’s move comes as countries and cities around the world have been seeking to ban or phase out the use of plastic products, particular­ly plastic bags. In March, New York announced plans for a statewide ban on most types of single-use plastic bags for retail sales after similar bans in California and Hawaii.

Trudeau noted that Canada has thrown away 8 billion Canadian dollars’ worth of plastic material each year and that, according to Environmen­t and Climate Change Canada, a national environmen­tal agency, that includes more than 34 million plastic bags each day.

By recycling and reusing plastic, Trudeau said, the country could reduce pollution, create 42,000 jobs and protect the environmen­t.

Trudeau’s announceme­nt comes as he is gearing up for a general election at the end of this year in which climate change and the environmen­t are expected to figure prominentl­y and are viewed as issues that resonate with voters, in particular the younger generation.

The government said it would undertake scientific analysis before determinin­g which plastic products to ban as early as 2021. But Trudeau said Canada expected to follow the example of the European Union, which voted in March to ban 10 single-use plastics that most often end up in the ocean, including plastic cutlery, plates and cotton-swab sticks.

The bloc introduced the legislatio­n after its research showed that plastics made up 80 percent of marine litter on European beaches, threatenin­g the coastal environmen­t.

Some retailers in Canada have become creative in trying to discourage consumers from using plastic bags, including by shaming them.

Shoppers at East West Market in central Vancouver, British Columbia, who decide to pay for a plastic bag are given a bag with an embarrassi­ng logo emblazoned on it such as “Into the Weird Adult Video Emporium,” “Dr. Toews Wart Ointment Wholesale” or “The Colon Care Co-Op.”

“It’s hard to always remember a reusable bag,” the store wrote on its Facebook page. “We redesigned our plastic bags to help you never forget again.”

In 2015, to help reduce pollution and waste, the British government introduced a 5-pence charge for plastic bags for most groceries, spawning concerns about “bag rage” by angry shoppers.

But the government said the fee would help reduce the cost of cleaning up garbage by about $76 million over a decade.

Nick Clegg, who was deputy prime minister at the time the charge was announced, estimated that it could take 1,000 years for a plastic bag to decompose.

 ?? Paul Chiasson / Associated Press ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said that by recycling and reusing plastic, Canada could create 42,000 jobs.
Paul Chiasson / Associated Press Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said that by recycling and reusing plastic, Canada could create 42,000 jobs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States