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Thailand launches anti-plastic bag campaign


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Thailand launches anti-plastic bag campaign
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BANGKOK, Jan 31 – Thailand's Department of Environmental Quality Promotion and CP-All, the world's third- biggest operator of 7-Eleven convenience stores, have launched a campaign aiming to encourage the public, particularly the youth, to cut their use of plastic bags at convenience stores for greater waste reduction in the country.

Department of Environmental Quality Promotion director general Jatuporn Burutpat said the amount of waste in Thailand has falled from an average 16 million tonnes a year by 300,000 tonnes as of 2013.

He said up to 20 per cent or 80,000 tonnes of the total waste quantity is plastic bags, which last year declined 10,000 tonnes a day. Fewer uses of plastic bags would efficiently help lessen pollution as plastic objects take longer time to decompose.

Mr Jatuporn said the “Kidtoong Kidtoong Season 3” campaign aims at reducing plastic bag usage to one bag a day in a bid to decrease the use of garbage bags.

This year, the campaign targeting youth will set up a network at schools nationwide so the students are aware of the effects of plastic bags. The project also calls on government sector to scrutinise the bill which allows bio-degradable plastic to be produced at lower cost as a solution to eradicate the use of plastic bags. (MCOT online news)

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-- TNA 2014-01-31

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Our local deli here in Ban Phe, Petra's, collects plastic bags. I took in a thickly packed bag of them to her just today.

I think in appropriate circumstances, they're reused, or properly recycled.

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Is this the same campaign that was started 20 years ago? For the last 20 years, when I go shopping I have canvas bags. I try to stay away from plastic as much as possible, but the problem is also the packaging. I have not seen butcher paper in the meat market for decades. It is all plastic. coffee1.gif

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does that mean i wont get the usual 20 bags at Tesco BigC etc..1 bag per itemfacepalm.giffacepalm.giffacepalm.giffacepalm.gif

What will most posters do--refuse the bags at checkout, at home when you sort out your tins-plastic-bottles-paper-----WE BUY PLASTIC BAGS TO SEPERATE THEM UP. then put them into PLASTIC bins for re cycle. cheesy.gifcheesy.gif

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Wow...what an inspirational and unique idea?

Haven't heard that before...in the last 3 months!

Make people pay and see, how it will get less!

And while you are on it: cut down on packaging or on...aaaaaahhhh.. mai pen rai...

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I once bought, along with my shopping, one of Tesco's big strong reusable bags and put it to the front of the items to be checked. I told the assistant to pack the goods into the bag but NO that wasn't allowed. She had to put the purchased bag into another plastic bag!

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Hope they start by going around the schools and teaching the kids but ther again when you see parents just throwing it anywhere then the kids will end up no better what a pity the likes of Tesco , big c and macro do not have huge containers to encourage plastic items to be placed in that I am sure would be a start

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Great first step - much of the trash that I see lying around is plastic bags and packaging.

One of the things I like about Thailand is the lack of overarching regulation and nanny-state rules, so I'm always weary of these sorts of rules. However, sometimes they are necessary, given the lack of awareness about keeping the city and the environment clean.

When they put straws into my bag, it physically pains me. I'm not 5 years old anymore, I can drink without a straw.

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If I'm not mistaken this campaign is launched every year. Last year they offered discounts for every cloth bag you filled at Tesco. This will never work in Thailand.

Barry

I remember going in to my local Tesco a few years back, I was with the missus and we took a couple of green "Bags for life".

We were told by the staff that we couldn't use them because the security people could not see through them.

I e mailed some chap at their Bangkok office who promised that something would be done.....Yeah right.....

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