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Plastic bag ban ignored at open food markets
By Liu Shanshan (chinadaily.com.cn)
Updated: 2009-06-10 17:29
The non-governmental organization released its survey's results on June 2 2009 to mark the one year anniversary of the plastic bag ban.
The Chinese government banned all stores -- from small retailers to major supermarkets -- from giving out free plastic bags to consumers and also prohibited production and sale of bags thinner than 0.025 mm. Plastic bags thicker than 0.025mm are legal as long as they are sold and not given out for free. Wen Hengfeng, project manager of Global Village, said while open food markets seem to "forget what the plastic bags ban regulates" Beijing supermarkets closely follow the ban's guidelines. "Nearly 93 percent of surveyed supermarkets demand consumers to pay for standard plastic bags." Wen said it is easier to monitor supermarkets where all sales are recorded to cashiers' accounts. But it is harder to monitor open food markets where private vendors work with cash and who for fear of losing customers offer the cheaper ultra-thin plastic bags for free. "Not a vendor here sells plastic bags to shoppers and if I charge them for a bag, they will never come to me. How could I?" said an open food market vendor from Beijing's Chaoyang District. |