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South Africa Bans Plastic Bags
BBC News On-Line ^ | May 09,2003 | staff writer

Posted on 05/10/2003 11:16:40 AM PDT by yankeedame

Last Updated:May 09,2003

South Africa bans plastic bags


Shoppers will now have to pay for reusable, recyclable plastic bags South Africa is making the thin and flimsy plastic bag illegal.

Known as the country's "national flower" because they litter streets - retailers handing out the bags now face a fine of 100,000 rand ($13,800) or a 10-year jail sentence.

The legislation means shoppers will either have to take bags with them when they go shopping, or buy new, thick, stronger plastic bags that are easier and more profitable to recycle.

According to the South African Government the country uses eight billion bags a year.

"Each plastic bag has a life of its own but we do not want it to end up on the street. We want everyone, from the producer to the retailer to the consumer, to start recycling," said Phindile Makwakwa, spokeswoman for the environment ministry.

You mustn't cut off the plastic. That means you are killing us. To buy food and buy plastic it's more expensive

Johannesburg shopper "We want to get rid of plastic bag waste completely. We are hoping to walk around in our streets in a year's time and see far less waste."

The move from bags with an average of 17 microns in thickness to the new minimum of 30 microns started about two years ago.

The government wanted to ban all plastic bags thinner than 80 microns, but the proposal caused an outcry among trade unions and business.

A micron, or micrometer, is one-thousandth of a millimetre (one 25th of a thousandth of an inch). A human hair measures about 50 microns across.

The Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu) said it would lead to the closure of factories and some 3,800 job losses, while plastics manufacturers said it was impossible to produce 80-micron bags with their existing equipment.

Businesses 'ready'

However, a compromise was reached: the new law would permit plastic bags with a minimum thickness of 30 microns, jobs in the plastic manufacturing and retail industries would be retained and new jobs would be created in the recycling industries.

Despite the sectors signing an agreement in September last year, newspapers reported this week that manufacturers were working around the clock, but were unlikely to meet the Friday deadline and that many shops would continue using the thinner bags.

PLASTIC FACTS SA uses 8bn bags annually Law aims to reduce bag use by 50% Bags now must be thick as a rubbish bag "We have really given them enough time. Unfortunately change for some people is never easy and they will keep on trying to get an extension," Ms Makwakwa told AFP news agency.

"But we've had an assurance from business that they will be ready... The law is the law and we are optimistic that the people are ready."

From Friday, the cost of the thick plastic bags will be carried by the customer.

Up to now the shopping bags have been handed out free-of-charge to shoppers.

Reservations

Some South Africans oppose the new law.

"You mustn't cut off the plastic. That means you are killing us. To buy food and buy plastic it's more expensive," one Johannesburg shopper told the BBC.

Poor South Africans use the bags to make hats, handbags, purses and scrubbing brushes which they then sell.

If they have to buy the bags - then the prices of their products will be forced upwards.

"I am very upset I've got four children and they need food and clothes," said one South African woman who makes handbags from bags.

But others feel the clamp down on plastic will benefit the environment.

"I grew up in the war. There was no such thing as a plastic bag. We all carried bags. It's fine as far as I'm concerned," said one shopper.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
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1 posted on 05/10/2003 11:16:40 AM PDT by yankeedame
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To: yankeedame
I thought this was gonna be just another Hildabeast or Madeline Albright thread....
what a relief
2 posted on 05/10/2003 11:27:36 AM PDT by joesnuffy (Moderate Islam Is For Dilettantes)
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To: joesnuffy
I thought this was gonna be just another Hildabeast or Madeline Albright thread

Bags, not Hags :-)

3 posted on 05/10/2003 11:28:43 AM PDT by krb (the statement on the other side of this tagline is false)
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To: yankeedame
they got so many problems in south africa and they worry about plastic bags?, unbeliebable.
4 posted on 05/10/2003 11:30:36 AM PDT by green team 1999
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To: yankeedame
They're nuts.
5 posted on 05/10/2003 11:30:49 AM PDT by Pyrion
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To: yankeedame
Plastic bags as the national flower of SA??? Was it that way before Mandella had his hooks in government?

Kentucky is as bad, with trash everywhere. White Castle, McDonnald's Somebody's Fried Chicken. it is all in the ditch. Best thing is to put all of the dumping SOB's in the ditch.

6 posted on 05/10/2003 11:34:09 AM PDT by Lion Den Dan
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To: yankeedame
"We have really given them enough time. Unfortunately change for some people is never easy and they will keep on trying to get an extension," Ms Makwakwa told AFP news agency.

I didn't know France, Russia or Germany were involved in this!

7 posted on 05/10/2003 11:38:22 AM PDT by LurkedLongEnough (Living proof that a Conservative can spring from a "Liberal Arts" education.)
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To: yankeedame
In germany they simply charge for the the plastic bags. This sounds like the sombody is paying off the gov to ban the bags in order to have a better source of raw used bags for recycling. This is not about the environment this about profit.
8 posted on 05/10/2003 11:47:27 AM PDT by longtermmemmory
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To: yankeedame
Black South Africans use the thin bags as symbols of the spirits of all the innocents who were killed in the racist years and like to launch them in the open air once they completed their use as a container.

This is only one of the many, many lovely elements of life in Africa, today, that has caused so many black Americans to abandon their truly terrible post-slavery lives in the US and return to mother Africa. It is clear that when more American blacks get the big pay out from reparations, they will flock back to Africa in even greater numbers.

Had the ancestors of American blacks not have been stolen from Africa, their descendants would have lived so much happier and more prodeuctive lives in Africa. The guilt of it all.

9 posted on 05/10/2003 12:56:32 PM PDT by Tacis
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To: Tacis
It is clear that when more American blacks get the big pay out from reparations, they will flock back to Africa in even greater numbers.

Fat Chance!

10 posted on 05/10/2003 1:08:48 PM PDT by shiva
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To: green team 1999
Didn't you hear? They've cured AIDS, eliminated rape and murder, and have full employment and a perfectly honest and representative government now. Why, once they threw off the yoke of apartheid the rest was a snap!
11 posted on 05/10/2003 4:06:46 PM PDT by rogue yam
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To: rogue yam
just think about it,the african national congress (commies)members are running the country,they are going to end up like Zimbawe
12 posted on 05/10/2003 7:33:55 PM PDT by green team 1999
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Comment #13 Removed by Moderator

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