You’ll soon be hard-pressed to find plastic checkout bags and plastic forks in Canada. The federal government announced earlier this year that it would ban the manufacture and import of single-use plastics by December. The ban includes:

  • checkout bags
  • cutlery
  • foodservice ware made from or containing problematic plastics that are hard to recycle
  • stir sticks
  • straws (with some medical and accessibility exceptions)
  • ring carriers (to be enacted June 2023

These categories of single-use plastic items were identified for elimination because they are “commonly found in the environment, are harmful to wildlife and their habitat, are difficult to recycle, and have readily available alternatives,” Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) said in a release. According to ECCC, this “world-leading ban on harmful single-use plastics will result in the estimated elimination of over 1.3 million tonnes of hard-to-recycle plastic waste and more than 22,000 tonnes of plastic pollution, which is equivalent to over one million full garbage bags.” The regulations are being phased in, and this is the first step.

The sale of flexible straws packaged with beverage containers (i.e., juice boxes) will be prohibited in June 2024. Then, by the end of 2025, Canada will ban all six categories of single-use plastics for export. These regulations are just one step that the federal government is taking toward its goal of zero plastic waste.

To read the full story, visit https://dailyhive.com/canada/canada-single-use-plastics-ban.
Author: Daily Hive Canada
Image: Di Studio/Shutterstock, Daily Hive Canada

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