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Plastic ban makes a difference in Krabi marine park


webfact

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It has taken a long time for them to get this going. I have been doing this for almost 20 years in Tarutao Marine National Park. I never used single use products in all the thousands of dive trips we did in the park. Neither did most of the foreign owned dive shops. It was always the locals that used styrofoam and disposable water bottles. We always brought the 20 liter jugs of water and reusable glasses with us. 

Glad to see their tackling the problem. Kudos to Trash Heroes for cleaning the beaches and pushing for this initiative.

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1 hour ago, sabyedee said:

It has taken a long time for them to get this going. I have been doing this for almost 20 years in Tarutao Marine National Park. I never used single use products in all the thousands of dive trips we did in the park. Neither did most of the foreign owned dive shops. It was always the locals that used styrofoam and disposable water bottles. We always brought the 20 liter jugs of water and reusable glasses with us. 

Glad to see their tackling the problem. Kudos to Trash Heroes for cleaning the beaches and pushing for this initiative.

It needs to catch on in Trang Province

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3 hours ago, Thian said:

Must be hard work to clean all the bowls...why not use a bentoset box like in Fuji? 

What ?

Dont they wash Bento boxes ??

 

Great initiative ... so much right about the old ways.

They are 'Tiffen Boxes'  in India. 

Still used widely.

Time for 'take-aways' to give an extra scoop to those who bring their own containers and bags !

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1 hour ago, zaZa9 said:

What ?

Dont they wash Bento boxes ??

 

Great initiative ... so much right about the old ways.

They are 'Tiffen Boxes'  in India. 

Still used widely.

Time for 'take-aways' to give an extra scoop to those who bring their own containers and bags !

To be honest i 've never seen Thai using those, in India they all used those and even had a deliverysystem so the men can get a fresh homecooked lunch delivered at work by couriers, every day again.

 

 

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Pintos are a great alternative.  They were fine before plastic so why not now.  I've seen very few people using them and some users are foreigners.  They are used in some Thai restaurants in the UK.  My daughter runs a Thai restaurant called 'Pinto Thai' in Putney.

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