Two Plastic Bags and a Fishball Stick
November 9, 2009 by Eugene
Filed under People and Lifestyle, Singapore, Waste and Materials
This article is contributed by Trina Tan.
Ever had the experience of buying a piece of bread or bun from a small bakery store and had to throw away the plastic bag immediately after eating it? In Singapore, buying and eating takeaway snack food is very popular. Over the past few years, we have observed the boom of small stalls that populate the basement level of each shopping mall. Examples of these food and their stalls would include bread from Breadtalk, a stick of fishball or curry puff from Old Chang Kee, bubble tea from Sweet talk, doughnuts from Dunkin Donuts, etc.
Often, these great tasting food items are already wrapped with a piece of plastic sheet over it, but usually cashiers would still place these into a second plastic bag. Hearing this, you would think – is it necessary to have everything wrapped in plastic? Surely there are some food types that can be placed into paper bags? Three fishballs on a stick is not worth that many plastic bags. Read more
Winrigo (S) Pte Ltd
March 12, 2008 by Eugene
Filed under Biodegradable and Eco friendly products, Eco friendly, Recycled products, Reduce, Reuse and Recycle
We provide repelletised plastic products that are based on the proprietary reforming, compounding, and colorization technology that we have developed. Used plastic products and waste plastics from production are reprocessed to higher value material after undergoing a material engineering process that matches the customer’s needs.
Address: No.21 Toh Guan Road East #08-38 Toh Guan Centre, Singapore 608609
Telephone: (65) 6310 1396
Fax: (65) 6219 2539
Email: winrigo@singnet.com.sg
Website: www.winrigo.com.sg
News on plastic bags in Japan and Hong Kong
November 22, 2007 by Eugene
Filed under Asia, Government and Policies, Waste and Materials
In Hong Kong, a leading supermarket chain has started charging customers an optional 20 Hong Kong cents each for a biodegradable shopping bag. This is in response to the government’s plan to introduce an environmental levy of 50 Hong Kong cents each on plastic shopping bags soon. More on the news from The Straits Times website. And if you’re interested in the proposal on the levy on plastic bags, details are available from the Hong Kong Environmental Protection Department website.
In Japan, more customers agree to the charge on plastic bags than those that oppose, and 60% of customers bring their own bags. Read more from the Japan for Sustainability article below.
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60% of Shoppers Carry Own Shopping Bags, 12% Always Decline Free Plastic Bags
Japan’s Ministry of the Environment released on May 30, 2007 the results of two surveys conducted in March, 2007: one survey on “customers’ utilization of plastic shopping bags and their awareness of the system for promotion of sorted collection and recycling of containers and packaging” and another survey on “retailers’ efforts to reduce the consumption of plastic shopping bags.”
The results show that, during the week before the survey, 85.0 percent of the customers received free plastic shopping bags every time they went shopping and only 11.9 percent did not.
Approximately 60 percent of those surveyed have their own shopping bags, showing that the practice of utilizing reusable shopping bags has become popular to some extent. Regarding the issue of charging for plastic shopping bags, 46.4 percent of the respondents agreed with the idea, outnumbering those who opposed it (28.9%). The price they said they wouldn’t mind paying for plastic shopping bags varied: Five yen (4 US cents) was the most popular (36.0%), followed by one to two yen (0.8-1.6 US cents) (21.5%) and three to four yen (2.4-3.3 US cents) (10.3%). Those who were aware of the revised Containers and Packaging Recycling Law accounted for 59.8 percent of respondents.
The latter survey of retailers confirmed that about 40 percent of retailers have set numerical targets for reducing the number of plastic shopping bags they distribute. Among specific efforts for reducing plastic bag distribution, the most popular was offering services such as giving customers stamps when they bring their own shopping bags. Only 9.4 percent of retailers were charging for plastic shopping bags.
Source credit: Japan for Sustainability.
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Source: The Straits Times; Environmental Protection Department; Japan for Sustainability. Image attribution: KingOfHiking: (r) 愛, 回家.






























