Supermarket ban sees '80% drop' in plastic bag consumption nationwide

Authored by theguardian.com and submitted by mvea
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Coles and Woolworths have prevented an estimated 1.5 billion bags being introduced into the environment

The ban on single-use plastic bags by Australia’s two largest supermarkets prevented the introduction of an estimated 1.5 billion bags into the environment, and the retail industry is hopeful this is only the beginning.

Coles and Woolworths’ decision to stop offering single-use disposable plastic bags midway through the year was initially met with swift public backlash.

But three months on the radical change has translated to an 80% drop in the consumption of plastic bags nationwide, according to the National Retail Association.

“Indeed, some retailers are reporting reduction rates as high as 90 per cent,” the NRA’s David Stout said on Sunday.

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Stout said the ban was a “brave” move from the major supermarkets and it was paving the way for smaller businesses, who typically cannot afford to risk the wrath of their customers, to follow suit.

“They’re obviously (supermarkets) seen as the product stewards so a lot of people will come back to them,” Stout told AAP.

“Obviously the best thing for smaller businesses is to either engineer out the bag completely or have the customer pay ... they should be able to consider that strategy without fear of backlash.”

Stout was hopeful major retailers would continue to lead the charge towards a more sustainable industry and move to ban other single-use packaging options.

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“Everyone delivering things in a package need to take responsibility for what they deliver it in,” he said.

“I think there’s going to be a lot more pressure on all of us to be more aware of what we consume.”

With New South Wales the only state or territory in Australia that has not moved to legislate to phase out plastic bags, Stout says it is time to step up and quit relying on the supermarket ban to do the work.

“We’re still seeing a lot of small to medium bags being used, especially in the food category, and whilst I get some comfort that the majors have done this voluntarily I think there still needs to be a ban in place,” he said.

“For business, for the environment, for the consumer and of course even for councils which have to work to remove these things from landfills, there’s a multitude of benefits on a whole to doing this.”

Caputtohsi on December 2nd, 2018 at 12:10 UTC »

I never could get in the habit of a reusable bag till I got this type that Ikea sells. https://m.ikea.com/us/en/catalog/products/art/20330491/

ThatHyperGuy on December 2nd, 2018 at 11:53 UTC »

Jeez! They didn’t have to ban ALL supermarkets, just ban the bags themselves. smh..

Washuchan on December 2nd, 2018 at 10:30 UTC »

The unexpected negative side effect is that several of my friends have just switched to using the reusable plastic bags like they used to use single-use plastic bags which has resulted in an overall increase in their plastic consumption since the 'reusable' bags are somewhat sturdier and more plastic goes into their creation.

They never seem to remember to bring their old bags back for reuse and they use them as bin liners, just like they did with the single-use bags...