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| More than 30 African countries have banned plastic bans as a way to tackle plastic waste due to its non-biodegrable nature AFP |
Nairobi (AFP) - A plastic bag ban comes into force in Tanzania on Saturday, as Africa leads efforts to stem the tide of plastic blighting the farthest reaches of the globe, and depths of the ocean.
Tanzania is
banning the importation, production, sale and use of plastic bags, becoming the
34th African country to implement such restrictions, according to the United
Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP).
"Let
me be clear on this, once it reaches June 1, the government is not planning to
add any more days and we will not tolerate anyone who will be caught using
them. No plastic bag will be allowed in the country," Tanzania's
vice-president Samia Suluhu Hassan said when announcing the move in April.
Tanzania --
whose wildlife is a popular tourist draw -- has also issued a notice to
travellers that they will have to "surrender" plastic bags in their
possession before entering the country.
"The
government expects that, in appreciation of the imperative to protect the
environment and keep our country clean and beautiful, our visitors will accept
minor inconveniences resulting from the plastic bags ban," said the
statement.
According
to local media, anyone caught manufacturing or importing plastic bags and
plastic wrappings could get a fine of one billion Tanzanian shillings
($430,000, 390,000 euros) or face imprisonment for up to two years.
Possession
and usage can lead to a fine of $87 or imprisonment for seven days, or both.
Degrees
of success
Globally,
127 countries have some sort of plastic bag legislation, 91 of which include a
ban or restriction on manufacturing, importation and retail distribution,
according to UNEP.
Africa has
34 of these countries, followed by Europe with 29.
Patrick Mwesigye,
UNEP's regional co-ordinator for resource efficiency told AFP that the degree
of success of the bans varied in Africa.
Rwanda's
plastic bag ban has been in place for over a decade and is considered one of
the most successful.
"But
Rwanda had an advantage that there wasn't much manufacturing of plastics,"
in the country when the ban was implemented, said Mwesigye.
Countries
with manufacturing and import industries, where jobs are impacted by bans, have
struggled more to enforce them.
"In
Kenya... it has been very effective. Still you have some plastic smuggled from
neighbouring countries" like Uganda, he said.
Kenya's
2017 plastic ban imposed particularly harsh laws, with fines of up to $38,000
(32,000 euros) and four-year prison sentences.
However in
reality, while there have been waves of arrests, fines and jail terms have been
far less than proscribed.
Mwesigye
said some countries put bans in place before ensuring there were suitable
alternatives in place, while monitoring and practical enforcement were also a
challenge.
Scourge
of single-use plastics
Joyce
Msuya, UNEP's Acting Executive Director, praised Tanzania for joining the
nations implementing the ban.
"It is
critical that bans now be complemented by efforts to identify effective
alternatives to single-use plastics...".
The world
currently produces more than 300 million tonnes of plastics annually, and there
are at least five trillion plastic pieces floating in oceans, scientists have
estimated.
Most of the
items polluting oceans and landscapes and causing horrendous deaths for the
creatures that live there, are made to be used once and thrown away, such as
bags, straws and food packaging.
In March
nations failed to agree to a timetable to phase out all single-use plastics,
opting instead to "significantly reduce" their production.
Neither the
United States, Canada or Australia have national plastic bag regulations --
although some American states like Hawaii or California have implemented bans.
The
European Union in March voted to ban a dozen forms of single-use plastics from
2021.

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