Home > Charge for Plastic Shopping Bags Begins Throughout Toyama Prefecture >
2008.08.08 Fri
Charge for Plastic Shopping Bags Begins Throughout Toyama Prefecture
In Japan's Toyama Prefecture, with the aim of reducing waste and curbing global warming, major supermarkets, laundries and other stores stopped providing plastic shopping bags free of charge on April 1, 2008. This is the first such prefecture-wide effort in Japan.

At the Toyama Plastic Bag Reduction Council, consisting of members from businesses, consumers, local governments and other parties concerned, the idea of discouraging shoppers from using plastic bags had long been considered. In March 2008, supermarkets, civic organizations and local governments finally reached an agreement regarding the promotion of reducing plastic bag use, and they worked together with other parties to reduce plastic bag use. Supermarkets will charge five yen (about 5 U.S. cents) for a plastic bag.

This "no more plastic bags" and "use your own bag" campaign will, if successful, result in the use of 300 million fewer plastic bags in the prefecture every year, which is a saving of oil equivalent to that used by 4,700 households, a decrease of 3,000 tons of waste and a 18,000-ton reduction in CO2 emissions. The prefecture hopes that such efforts will spread to all of its 1.1 million citizens, and that it will become a major trend for protecting Mother Earth.

http://www.pref.toyama.jp/english/index.html

Posted: 2008/08/08 11:26:23 AM

| Posted by jfs |
NEXT ACTION
Search more news from JFS   
Read next article: Toshiba to Discontinue Incandescent Bulb Production by End of Fiscal 2010
Read previous article: Tokyo Gas Starts the Test of Producing Bioethanol and Biogas from Food Waste
Support JFS
About JFS
RELATED NEWS

Japanese Institute Evaluates Carbon Balances of Tropical Forests in Southeast Asia, Deforestation Effects using New Model
Honda to Reduce CO2 Emissions from Global Products by 30%
Toyota CRDL Succeeds in World's First Artificial Photosynthesis Using only Water and CO2
Temperatures at Higher Latitudes of Northern Hemisphere to Rise More than Predicted
Japanese Shipping Company Releases Online CO2 Calculator for Cargo Transport


Japanese University Grows Vegetables at Wastewater Treatment Plant
Public-Private-Academic Partnership in Kyoto to Convert Municipal Solid Waste into Ethanol
Coca-Cola System in Japan Achieves Significant Reduction of CO2 Emissions
Mazda Recycles Scrapped Bumpers for New Vehicles
Nippon Paper to Use Wooden Rubble from Great East Japan Earthquake as Factory Fuel

Creative Commons