Show and Tell With Pride
Restaurants and grocery
stores worry about a supply of alternative products as the government
announces details of its ban on single-use plastics. in Toronto. June
20, 2022. Steve Russell | Toronto Star | Getty Images |
"By the end of the year, you won’t be able to manufacture or import these harmful plastics. After that, businesses will begin offering the sustainable solutions Canadians want, whether that’s paper straws or reusable bags.""With these new regulations, we’re taking a historic step forward in reducing plastic pollution, and keeping our communities and the places we love clean.""We have not closed the door to banning certain other single-use plastics.We're starting with these ones because, based on the data we have, these are the most harmful plastic substances. But it may be the case that we decide in the near future to ban some others."Steven Guilbeault, minister of environment and climate change, Canada"The government needs to shift into high gear by expanding the ban list and cutting overall plastic production.""Relying on recycling for the other 95% is a denial of the scope of the crisis.""It's a drop in the bucket. Until the government gets serious about overall reductions of plastic production, we're not going to see the impact we need to see in the environment or in our waste streams."Sarah King, head, Greenpeace Canada, oceans and plastics campaign
Restaurants and grocery
stores worry about a supply of alternative products as the government
announces details of its ban on single-use plastics. in Toronto. June
20, 2022. Steve Russell | Toronto Star | Getty Images |
The Liberal government of Justin Trudeau is a virtue-signalling
administration like few others. It is also self-congratulatory to the
Nth degree, and madly in love with photo opportunities certain to be
splashed over the front pages above the fold of every newspaper in
Canada. And if the news is of a type that addresses a universal problem,
the chances are it will reverberate further than Canada and make it to
the news of the day on global media; all the better for a government
obsessed with itself and with the efficacy of its patinated veneer.
Shiny, green and of-the-moment.
So, there it is, another campaign promise half-fulfilled. No more plastic straws, single-use shopping bags, plastic cutlery, etc. Makers and users of such indispensable,
environment-cluttering garbage have until 2024 to figure out either how
to get along without them, or plausible replacements. The industry is
staggering under the challenge, and outraged that it has been targeted.
Too bad the same cannot yet be said of the same industry that now
proliferates transparent plastic clamshells full of fresh fruits and
vegetables on grocery shelves and those neat little plastic carry-bags
of same.
Can't
make everyone happy, can we? Some environmental groups speak of the
bans as typically cosmetic, leaving the vast majority of plastic waste
in Canada yet to be dealt with. Even the government's own science
sources indicate the ban will have a negligible effect on, for example,
ocean health, the very goal of the ban. The fact is, the real plastic
culprits messing up Canada's shorelines and its portion of the world's
oceans, are being ignored; at the very least not adequately addressed.
A
2019 study Environment Canada commissioned to examine the state of the
Canadian plastics market estimated just one percent of Canadian plastic
waste was lost to "leakage"; the meaning of which is that the waste
entered the environment as litter. Of 3,268 kilotonnes of plastic waste
generated in 2015, 3,239 kilotonnes was "collected"; mostly in
landfills, not recycling. The Deloitte study recommended that the
leakage could be reduced ten-fold by efforts "to reduce litter"; no
mention of plastic bans as a solution.
The
proposed federal plastics ban relied on data providing a scientific
backgrounder from the Great Canadian Shoreline Cleanup in estimating the
effect of plastic on waterways of Canada. In their 2018 report, plastic
bags actually ranked sixth, and straws ninth, as items most often
recovered from cleanups on shorelines. Among the worst offenders, bottle
caps and cigarette butts accounting for 42.1 percent alone of all
litter recovered. More recent cleanups featured rising rates of
discarded surgical masks. None of these items are mentioned in the ban.
Ocean
plastic is undeniably a growing global problem, but one driven almost
exclusively by abandoned fishing gear, and poor waste management in the
developing world. In Canada, a Ghost Gear Program was initiated in 2019,
spending about $8.3 million recovering 739 tonnes of abandoned fishing
gear from the oceans, representing close to a third of the estimated
2,500 tonnes of plastic litter Deloitte's report estimated find their
way into the environment annually. Not among the six items the new ban
targets.
A shopper places her goods into her car outside a supermarket. Canadians will need to find alternatives for plastic straws and grocery bags by the end of the year. (Mark Baker/The Canadian Press) |
Labels: Canada, Environmental Degradation, Plastic Waste, Plastics Ban, Research
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