South Africa Bans Plastic Bags 65
orrinrule writes "Yahoo! reports that South Africa's environment ministry bans plastic bags." Life's no fun any more.
"Pull the trigger and you're garbage." -- Lady Blue
Re:But but... (Score:1, Funny)
Uh oh (Score:5, Funny)
punish those that litter? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:punish those that litter? (Score:4, Funny)
Not banned... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Not banned... (Score:4, Funny)
Makes you wonder why Slashdot Submitters feel the need to sensationalize their stories. There must be aspirations to work for CNN. "Hi Mom. My description of a story is in print!"
Bah quit whining (Score:1)
South Africa Bans Plastic Bags
Technically it's still correct! Sure someone may assume that it means all plastic bags but it can just as easily mean all bags below a certain thickness. It's not
Logical Conclusion (Score:3, Funny)
uh, no, not exactly... (Score:2, Redundant)
Poor guys... (Score:4, Funny)
Ban hands (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Ban hands (Score:2)
PE bag (Score:1)
Now, where is the bad news?
plastic or paper? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:plastic or paper? (Score:2)
Interesting. The Ecology Center [ecologycenter.org] argues the opposite: Plastic is harder to recycle, the recycling process is more toxic, and plastic can only effectively be recycled a handfull of times before the chemcical structure begins to break down.
There's recycled and repolymerized (Score:2)
If you're just trying to re-melt and mold (or blow, or extrude) the same polymer again, I'm sure you're right.
Re:There's recycled and repolymerized (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:plastic or paper? (Score:2)
Yeah, but THEY'RE FREE NOW. Who cares? Onward to Syria!
Seriously though, if we just make some commercials that say "garbage helps terrorism", people will just stop making garbage. Problem solved.
Hmm, I think they are lying... (Score:2, Interesting)
I know it makes it sound interesting, but why can't the press just report the news instead of making commentary on it?
Great (Score:5, Interesting)
On a serious note, here in the US we use those bags for everything. Then we stuff them in a drawer or next to the fridge and reuse them much of the time. You don't see them littering our streets much at all. If South Africans feel it's okay to litter these bags everywhere, then they'll feel fine about littering other things too. The law might help a little, but you can't clean up your town or country without first cleaning up the prevailing attitude about littering.
For an example check out American Samoa. The whole island looks like New Orleans after Mardi Gras. Trash everywhere. You can't drive down a road without the car in front of you tossing crap out the window. It's disgusting. If you ask about it the locals just smirk like you're the foolish one... Hey the storms and ocean eventually wash everything away right? How silly to actually collect it and put it somewhere out of sight! A strong littering law there would certainly generate some cash for the government, but it would be even worse than speed limits here; no one would really believe in it, and no one would really follow it.
First they would have to do a huge public awareness campaign and market cleanliness as COOL and responsible, and market littering as ignorant and old-fashioned. They'd have to teach school children to yell at their parents (like they do here about smoking), and give awards to clean-up crews. Then the law would MEAN something, other than fine revenue for the state.
Clicheland (Score:2)
Any way, if you had read past the stupid Slashdot headline, you'd
my local coop... (Score:4, Interesting)
I have a question (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:my local coop... (Score:2)
Not here at the local Wal-mart. Most of the checkers load each plastic bag with two items. And I'm not talking milk here. Often I'll get home and find 50 bags each containing something like a can of beans and two envelopes of kool-aid. No kidding.
Occasionally I'll run into a checker that makes an attempt to fill bags more optimally. One would even use that 6 bag turntable thing they use to hold 6 partially full ba
Ireland Charges for plastic bags (Score:3, Interesting)
The country is a cleaner place now.
I think every country should follow us, (UK take note)
Re:Ireland Charges for plastic bags (Score:1)
That really isn't a bad idea. Here in the states (some anyways) we have bottle deposits for soda and beer. Basically when you buy a case of soda here it will say 4.00. But when you actually pay it will be 5.20. Then you can return the bottles or cans for your "refund". Maybe something like that should be implemented.
Now to my original point. If only one store passed on a cast like this to their customers, it'd be death to that store. Perceiveable costs, ev
Re:Ireland Charges for plastic bags (Score:2, Interesting)
The 15c per bag is passed onto the goverment, the send inspectors round randomly to check this.
Re:Ireland Charges for plastic bags (Score:1)
Oh, that is bad form. The last thing the world needs is more government. If anything the government should take that money and earmark it for recycling programs. Best case the stores should be required to put the money towards recycling.
Some of the local supermarkets around here will allow you to use old paper bags and get 5 cents for each off your reciept.
Re:Ireland Charges for plastic bags (Score:3, Informative)
It is a simple, straightforeward tax aimed at preventing litter. And (now pay attention - this is the important bit...) IT WORKS.
People have started reusing plastic bags. The don't thow them away, or drop them on the street. They reuse them.
In the South African case, the country has a major problem in some areas of litter from cheap plastic bags. The bags are made as thin as possible, to make them as
Re:Ireland Charges for plastic bags (Score:1)
Its better then the way things are, I will admit better things could be done
But atleast its something, atleast its helped in someway.
People are now more aware of plastic bags because now they have to pay for them.
The ironic thing about all of this IS, back in the 70's people had to pay for bags here and it was supermarkets that introduced the idea of free bags.
Re:Ireland Charges for plastic bags (Score:1)
Re:Ireland Charges for plastic bags (Score:2)
Re:Ireland Charges for plastic bags (Score:2)
Environmentalists keep trying to do stuff like that in the U.S., but nobody wants the inconvenience. In California, after a lot of noise and confrontation, we have a "recycle value" of 3 cents per container. Any more would cut into soda pop consumption, and drive 7-11 out of business! Of course, such a small deposit has no effect at all.
Re:Ireland Charges for plastic bags (Score:2)
Maybe I'm Not Seeing Something Here... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Maybe I'm Not Seeing Something Here... (Score:2)
Ding ding ding! Right answer. The problem with the very thin plastic bags is that they blow around, even blowing out of trash dumps. This has nothing to do with individuals littering.
The best plastic bag story ever! (Score:5, Funny)
Back in 1990, pet-store owner Stuart Thomson ordered new plastic bags for his store in Glasgow, Scotland. Within weeks, a stack of flimsy white sacks stamped with a red parrot and his Pet Shop's address showed up on his doorstep.
Mr. Thomson didn't give the matter any more thought until a letter arrived years later from a German trekker reporting odd tales from the sun-scorched bazaars of Central Asia. That was only the beginning. One by one, youthful backpackers, European diplomats and rugged mountain climbers started turning up at his shop like disciples, guided by the address on a plastic bag.
None had any interest in cat litter, poodles or aquariums. They had come to Glasgow in search of an answer to a mystery they had encountered on their travels thousands of miles away: Why, from the blue-tiled mosques of Uzbekistan to the hairpin turns of the mountainous Karakoram Highway, were so many people carrying bags adorned with Mr. Thomson's red parrot?
Border guards in Pakistan use them to hold their lunch. Kyrgyz shoppers stuff them with pickled fish, speckled rice and malodorous meat. Camels once traversed the sandy paths of Central Asia's legendary trade route, the Silk Road. But today's traders think nothing of carrying their wares in a Scottish parrot sack.
Without knowing it, Mr. Thomson had turned his cramped pet shop into one of the best-known brand names in Central Asia. In this age of global capitalism, the parrot sack is a bizarre mutation, a peculiar byproduct of the big bang that has led the planet's most diverse peoples and cultures to be united by nothing more substantial than the Nike swoosh, the Golden Arches or Mr. Thomson's red bird.
"I was really flummoxed at the beginning," the pet salesman says, adjusting his spectacles as an employee vacuums birdseed from the rug. Soon after the German wrote, a group of merry Scots having a dinner party in western China rang up. "We'd be happy if you'd settle an argument," they giggled into the phone. "How did these bags come to be here?"
Good question. A reconnaissance mission to the tiny, mountainous republic of Kyrgyzstan suggests western China itself is the source of all that is plastic and parrot-festooned. The traders bringing the bags here are Uighurs, the Muslim minority group from China's restive desert region of Xinjiang. They sell their wares at a giant, muddy market in the Kyrgyz capital of Bishkek, lunching on dumplings and noodles as shoppers paw through brightly colored fabrics, stacks of buckets and rows and rows of parrot bags.
"We don't talk to journalists," one mutters in broken Russian when asked about the bags, disappearing into a metal hut before his picture can be snapped.
These secretive agents, Mr. Thomson believes, buy the bags from a giant plastics factory in Urumqi, the capital of Xinjiang. The plant prints about 150,000 bags for the pet shop a year and churns out millions of variations on the side for extra profit, he says, adding that some of his business associates suggested to him that the sacks may be part of an elaborate scheme to milk subsidies from the Chinese government. "The machines are going 24 hours a day, I'm told," he says.
Mr. Thomson's sacks carry the classic design -- a red parrot on a white bag with the address 992 Pollokshaws Road, Glasgow. Most of the bags in Central Asia once copied the same motif, only on a yellow sack. But a stroll through the Alamadeen food market in Bishkek shows the parrot has begun to mutate wildly. One knockoff boasts two red parrots, the wrong address on Pollokshaws Road and, oddly, the words "More, More, More!" Another shows two red robins clearly inspired by the parrot and the message "The Plastic Bag Shop. Welcome Patronage."
Mr. Thomson can't fathom why his parrot became the subject of such admiration. He's too busy with squawking birds and barking dogs to get to
Re:The best plastic bag story ever! (Score:4, Funny)
(Sorry, had to be said...
Or as Monty Python might say .... (Score:1)
It's not dead, it's just resting!
The (ahem) best! (Score:2)
Re:The best plastic bag story ever! (Score:2)
Slashdot's No Fun Anymore (Score:5, Insightful)
Which sounds pretty sensible to me. If these bags had even a tiny monetary value, they'd soon be scavanged up by SA's huge impoverished underclass. By forcing merchants to use recyclable bags, the solve an ecological problem and inject a little money into the lower economy too.
Western Alaska Banned Them Too (Score:4, Interesting)
"Outside the Western Alaska village of Emmonak, white plastic shopping bags used to start appearing 15 miles from town. They blew out of the dump and rolled across the tundra like tumbleweeds. In Galena, they snagged in the trees and drifted into the Yukon River. Outside Kotlik, on the Yukon Delta, bags were found tangled around salmon and seals. No more. All three villages banned the bags."
Typing monkeys produce 5 pages of gibberish [slashdot.org]
I'll be glad to see them banned everywhere. (Score:2, Interesting)
Plastic lasts all but forever in the wild, in your house it lasts about 20 seconds.
Nobody hardly recycles it. It fills the dumps, it blows everywhere, it's terrible.
I don't remember seeing too many brown paper bags blowing around before these damn things took over. Junk (toys, houseware, car parts, etc.) made of plastic is just plain junk, it breaks and
Re:I'll be glad to see them banned everywhere. (Score:2)
Plastic Bags Are Evil, Evil, Evil! (Score:2)
Or, the kid puts that gallon of milk into one little bag. Of course, the bottom of the bag breaches on your way out.
Or, the cute little handle breaks as you walk out of the store, dumping the contents.
Or, you say "Paper, please" and the kid says "We're out". You look 5 feet to the right and
Re:Plastic Bags Are Evil, Evil, Evil! (Score:2)
Technological solution to sociological problem (Score:2)
This is another one of those legislative solutions to sociological problems that the current South African regime is so apt to dream up. The problem is that a sizeable part of the population (who incidentally also make up most of the voters for the party of the honorable comrade minister who initiated this) care not about walking to the closest rubbish bin to dump their stuff in it - I think somebody once mentioned something about stimulating the economy by creating jobs for janitors. Unfortunately, only th
The reason behind the new law (Score:3, Interesting)
Between the thinness of the bags and the ink used on the plastic bags by the shops and supermarkets, attempts of recycling the bags just caused the plastic to be contaminated beyond use.
Additionally the 30micron bags, beyond merely being easier to recycle, will also encourage reuse, since the amounts paid by the consumers out of their own pockets, while certainly not excessive, are quite noticible to the majority of South Africans.
It had been observed that people tend to value what they pay for somewhat more than that which they receive for free...
corn starch (Score:2, Interesting)
Banning these thin, useless bags seems rather stupid . The "better" thicker bags will NOT break down like the thin corn starch bags, which will just make the problem worse. Seems more logical to require ALL shopping bags be of the corn starch variety. Or, better still, require all shopping sacks to be of cloth
Editors that don't read articles (Score:2)
Life's no fun any more.
Given the rapidly spiralling quality of slashdot in the past months, I suspect this reflects the opinion of most of the editorial staff..
Ban Balloons (Score:1)