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Liberals to Ban Single-use Plastics as early as 2021

GameBoy27

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Nov 23, 2004
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The Trudeau government will ban single-use plastics as early as 2021, CBC News has learned from a government source.

Plastic straws, cotton swabs, drink stirrers, plates, cutlery and balloon sticks are just some of the single-use plastics that will be banned in Canada, according to the source.

This is part of a larger strategy to tackle the plastic pollution problem that the government is expected to announce Monday.

According to the source, the full list of plastics to be banned by the federal government will follow the model chosen by the European Union, which voted in March to also ban products made of oxo-degradable plastics, such as bags. Oxo-degradable plastics include additives that don't completely biodegrade but fragment into small pieces and remain in the environment.

Fast-food containers and cups made of expanded polystyrene, which is similar to white styrofoam, will also be banned.

At the G7 in Charlevoix, Que., last June, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced the Canada-led Ocean Plastics Charter.

Canada, France, Germany, Italy, the U.K. and the European Union immediately signed on, agreeing to find ways to deal with marine plastics litter.

All of those countries have moved to curb plastic pollution, some of them with laws to reduce the consumption of plastics.

A report done earlier this year by consulting firms Deloitte and ChemInfo Services commissioned by Environment and Climate Change Canada found in 2016 only nine per cent of plastic waste was recycled in Canada, with 87 per cent ending up in landfills.

Environment and Climate Change Canada says that Canadians throw away more than 34 million plastic bags every day.

It's a global issue because most plastic bags wind up in landfills and it can take as long as 1,000 years for them to decay.

Many also end up in the oceans harming marine ecosystems and wildlife. Recently whales have been found dead, washed ashore with pounds of plastic in their stomachs.

There is also a problem with microplastics that end up in water and the food supply.

The Deloitte and ChemInfo Services report also found that between 2012 and 2017, plastics manufacturing became one of the fastest-growing sectors, worth about $35 billion in sales, employing 93,000 people mostly in Ontario, Quebec and Alberta.

The study also found the Canadian recycling industry generates about $350 million and is in the hands of fewer than a dozen recycling companies with about 500 employees.

According to the Environment and Climate Change Canada, the new plastics strategy will generate jobs and reduce greenhouse gases. It is expected to release details on how this will work on Monday.

More recently, Canada was criticized for dozens of containers of rotting garbage found in the Philippines.

Ottawa is spending $1.14 million to bring those cargo containers of recyclables contaminated with garbage back to Canada for disposal.

Some municipalities have already moved to reduce plastic waste, but environmental experts point to a need for a consistent national strategy.

Tofino and Deep Cove, B.C., have banned plastic straws; Fogo Island replaced plastic bags with alternatives; Montreal is banning the use of plastic bags and bottles; St. John's promised in 2017 it would ban plastic bags.

The prime minister and Environment Minister Catherine McKenna will announce the new plastic strategy in two separate locations on Monday.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/government-to-ban-single-use-plastics-by-2021-1.5168386


I find it interesting that they're banning things like single use plastic bags and water bottles that can be recycled, while doing nothing about non-recyclable coffee cups. Just think of how many of those Canadians dispose of on a daily basis.

If you want to reduce the amount of plastics from landfill, put a deposit on it. Works like a charm for beer cans, wine bottles etc.
 

Butler1000

Well-known member
Oct 31, 2011
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I agree with Gameboy on the coffee cups. But I think this is a good policy. I've been seriously cutting mine back. Simple things like no straws, own a set of portable cutlery I take to open air events with food. Bring my own bags not just to the grocery store but all shopping trips. Or just say no to the bag.

Also changing things like I chose peanut butter(all natural) based on glass jar vs. Plastic one. I'm not perfect but with a bit of attention alot can be saved.
 

oral.com

Sapere Aude, Carpe Diem
Jul 21, 2004
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I also think it’s good policy, but as usual count on government to fuck it up.
 

bemused

Member
Nov 13, 2007
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I have traveled to many remote areas of the world. Plastic is everywhere. In the ocean, lakes, rivers, beaches and the land. It is killing animals and will kill us. It is an emergency. All of us must cut back and eliminate plastic from our lives. No styrofoam. No plastic straws or bottles. No plastic bags................the list does not stop there................I support any steps taken by anyone to eliminate plastic.
 

The Oracle

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Mar 8, 2004
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On the slopes of Mount Parnassus, Greece
While not a fan of Trudeau's Liberals I do applaud this.

Like what have been said before me here. I stopped using plastic bags some time ago and make every effort possible to not use any plastic.

I never thought I would say this but I'm not against a carbon tax if and only if the money gained is put into scientific research or something that goes to help our environment. So I would want a public record available as to wherever every cent goes. And Trudeau should be all for that right? I mean he's all about transparency right?
 

shack

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Oct 2, 2001
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I have traveled to many remote areas of the world. Plastic is everywhere. In the ocean, lakes, rivers, beaches and the land. It is killing animals and will kill us. It is an emergency. All of us must cut back and eliminate plastic from our lives. No styrofoam. No plastic straws or bottles. No plastic bags................the list does not stop there................I support any steps taken by anyone to eliminate plastic.
It reminds me of how there used to be so much litter on the highway from people throwing crap out the window. It may have been small amounts per vehicle but then it adds up and you've got a big mess. Legislation fixed that problem nicely.
 

GameBoy27

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Nov 23, 2004
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I have traveled to many remote areas of the world. Plastic is everywhere. In the ocean, lakes, rivers, beaches and the land. It is killing animals and will kill us. It is an emergency. All of us must cut back and eliminate plastic from our lives. No styrofoam. No plastic straws or bottles. No plastic bags................the list does not stop there................I support any steps taken by anyone to eliminate plastic.
Did you know that about 90 percent of all the plastic that reaches the world's oceans gets flushed through just 10 rivers: The Yangtze, the Indus, Yellow River, Hai River, the Nile, the Ganges, Pearl River, Amur River, the Niger, and the Mekong (in that order)? In other words, Canada contributes essentially nothing to the plastics in the ocean.

While I'm all for reducing, reusing and recycling, instead of banning plastic water bottles, why not put a deposit on every plastic bottle, including pop bottles? Of all the plastic bottles on store shelves, water accounts for only a small portion of them.

 

Mr Deeds

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Mar 10, 2013
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Finally the liberials do something worth while I sure hope they dont fuck it up
 

fall

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Dec 9, 2010
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Did you know that about 90 percent of all the plastic that reaches the world's oceans gets flushed through just 10 rivers: The Yangtze, the Indus, Yellow River, Hai River, the Nile, the Ganges, Pearl River, Amur River, the Niger, and the Mekong (in that order)? In other words, Canada contributes essentially nothing to the plastics in the ocean.



/QUOTE]

Exactly. Countries like Canada can do nothing that can help prevent global warming or pollution. All these efforts are insignificant but will cost a lot for Canadians (both money and inconvenience). Anyone who say "start with yourself" knows nothing about economics. It is the same as to have voluntary tax system: everybody agree that taxes are important but noone want to pay them voluntarily. Unless large polluters (China, India, etc.) and large consumers (USA) are on board, nothing will change. And once they are on board, we do not have to be - we can simply free ride unless the big guys make us to comply.
 

james t kirk

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Aug 17, 2001
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I fully support any legislation that ends the plastic insanity.

A full ban on all single use plastic bottles (as per Gameboy's photo above).

When I was a kid, there were no plastic bottles. There was glass and there was a deposit on them. There were no plastic bags in stores, there were paper bags (that decompose easily). Getting back to the glass bottles make sense because they can be used. Put a buck deposit on every bottle, you get your buck back when you bring the bottles back. Not too many people would opt to throw away a bottle if there was a substantial deposit on it. The beauty of glass is that it can be reused an almost infinite number of times until it breaks. And then you can truly recycle the broken glass. With single use plastic bottles, it's only all about convenience. You use it once, you throw it out. (And make no mistake, 97 percent of it goes to landfill, they don't recycle shit. That's the big lie. Everyone thinks that the plastic gets chewed up and reused, but the reality is that it goes to the landfill, or worse, the oceanfill. All those water bottles that you throw in the blue box? They don't get recycled. 98% of it goes to landfill.)

Time to end this insanity. I am skeptical of global warming, I fully admit, but I'm all for banning all single use plastics and the sooner the better. (And btw, though I don't buy into global warming, I'm all for curbing air pollution, and funding mass transit. I just don't buy the notion that my wood burning fireplace is evil.)

And lastly, we as a society need to end the over packaging that is now rampant in mercantilism. Everything I buy is over packaged. From salad mix inside a water-bottle like container, to my razor blades packed inside a plastic water bottle to the Milwaukee tape measure I bought recently that was mounted to this rigid waterbottle like plastic backer that I needed a band saw to cut it free. WTF is going on with that?

We as a society need to end the madness of single use plastics and over packaging and we need to do it now.

The liberals didn't even scratch the surface on this one.
 

Smallcock

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Jun 5, 2009
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OnTheWayOut

This is something most everyone could get behind but you just know the libs will turn it into something painful. How about we ban the libs as well?
 

shack

Nitpicker Extraordinaire
Oct 2, 2001
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This is something most everyone could get behind but you just know the libs will turn it into something painful. How about we ban the libs as well?
Doug Ford for PM. Canada will become a super power.
 
Ashley Madison
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