Taiwan to ban single-use plastic drinking straws, plastic bags, disposable utensils entirely by 2030

Authored by hongkongfp.com and submitted by limoto
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Taiwan is set to ban single-use plastic drinking straws in several phases, starting with the food and beverage industry next year. The Environmental Protection Administration announced the plan last Tuesday.

As of next year, food and beverage stores such as fast food chains must stop providing plastic straws for in-store use. From 2020, free plastic straws will be banned from all food and beverage outlets. From 2025, the public will have to pay for takeaway plastic straws, and a blanket ban is to be imposed in 2030.

Free plastic shopping bags, disposable food containers and disposable utensils will also be banned in 2020 from all retail stores that issue uniform invoices – widely used in Taiwan. Additional fees will also be imposed in 2025.

Minister Lee Ying-yuan said a blanket ban is set to be introduced in 2030 on all plastic bags, disposable utensils, and disposable beverage cups.

“You can use steel products, or edible straws – or maybe you just don’t need to use straws at all,” he said. “There is no inconvenience caused at all.”

Lee said that the future prices for such disposable plastic items in stores will not necessarily be based on the price of such items in Europe, but will be based on prices in Taiwan.

He added that the reduction in the use of plastic is the responsibility of all members of the public rather than just his agency. The drive will create a better environment for future generations, he said.

Yen Ning, Ocean Campaigner at Greenpeace East Asia, said she hoped bans on paper utensils and single-use chopsticks could be implemented in stages in the future.

Scotland is set to ban plastic straws by end of 2019, according to The Independent.

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hhpop on February 22nd, 2018 at 09:29 UTC »

2030 sounds far away, and it is, but remember that the country basically revolves around disposable plastics.

Eating out at night markets / little hole-in-the-wall restaurants is the national pastime. A huge portion of these meals are takeaway or on-the-go and - you guessed it - are served in disposable plastic food containers. Usually paired with a drink - bubble tea, papaya juice, whatever - in plastic cup with plastic straw. In a plastic bag, of course.

Taiwan has a traditionally powerful plastics industry dating back to the 1960s. Lobbying is common, a la the US system.

Moving to ban all single-use plastics outright, even in a distant 10 years, is actually quite a bold and ambitious move by the current government.

Also... Tai-Ban.

LeapingLupine on February 22nd, 2018 at 05:19 UTC »

It seems more and more countries are starting to STOP the 'single use' plastic to save the planet! Good, do it and let the word spread far and wide.

fflando on February 22nd, 2018 at 03:25 UTC »

I want bubble tea now