Greece charges for use of plastic carrier bags at supermarkets

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As supermarkets across Greece reopened on Wednesday after the New Year, consumers are faced with a new charge.

For each plastic carrier bag used at the counter from now on, Greeks would have to pay five U.S. dollars as part of renewed efforts to protect the environment from the hazardous plastics.

Under a law which came into effect on Jan. 1, all revenues would go to the Greek Recycling Agency for environmental programmes, according to Greek Environment Ministry announcement.

The charge would be increased to nine euro cents on Jan. 1, 2019.

National growth LS

The aim is to reduce the number of plastic bags used by Greeks which is double than the average in Europe.

In 2015 when a EU directive was ratified aimed at limiting the use per person to 90 bags annually by 2019 and 40 by 2025, Greeks used 242 to 363 plastic bags per person, Greek Recycling Agency noted.

The number exceeded 400 plastic bags per person in 2016, according to the Greek Research Institute of Retail Consumer Goods (IELKA).

And more than half come from supermarkets.

According to IELKA’s survey, six in two Greeks said they would start using reusable bags from now on, three out on ten had not made a decision and one in ten said they would keep using plastic bags, in spite of the extra cost.

As the culture of recycling is still lagging in Greece, most plastic bags, along other household waste, end up in the trash.

According to Eurostat data, less than 20 per cent of household waste is recycled in the country.

The charge may encourage Greek consumers to start using more reusable fabric or paper bags, environmentalists said, but expressed doubts whether the small cost compared to other similar charges in other countries or exceptions would help significantly.

Kiosks and open air markets are exempted from the new regulation.

There is an all-out ban in 35 countries worldwide, according to IELKA, while in others, the charge is much higher (0.25 euro cents in the Netherlands).

For experts such as Christina Kontaxi, Director of the local NGO Mediterranean SOS Network, stricter policies are needed to bring substantial change.

“More preparation should have been made to educate the public in depth and help businessmen adjust to the new standards, Kontaxi said. (Xinhua/NAN)

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