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Hanoi targets no use of nylon bags by 2020

The capital city of Hanoi wants to be rid of all plastic and nylon bags in traditional markets by next year.
Hanoi targets no use of nylon bags by 2020 ảnh 1Hanoi plans not to use nylon bags in supermarkets and traditional markets by the year 2020. (Photo: kienthuc.net.vn)

Hanoi (VNA) -
The capital city of Hanoi wants to be rid of all plasticand nylon bags in traditional markets by next year.

This is the call from the municipal Department of Industry and Trade. The cityis appealing to businesses to join the campaign.

More than 200 companies in the capital signed commitments to cut plastic wastein industrial production and consumption distribution.

The signing took place at a conference on Actions against Plastic Waste inIndustry Production and Consumption organised by the department.

The plastic waste discharged from production and consumption activities washuge and most of the garbage was hard to decompose, said Tran Thi Phuong Lan,the department’s vice director.

Statistics show that in Hanoi alone there are about 100 plastic productionbusinesses along with 24 shopping malls, 140 supermarkets, 454 traditionalmarkets and thousands of shops trading food and fruit many using nylon bags andother plastics.

Although there have been several studies and warnings on the health andenvironment risks, nylon bags and plastic products remain very popular becauseof convenience, Lan said.

“Every day, the city has been discharging between 5,500 and 6,000 tonnes ofdomestic waste, of which plastic accounted for about 10 percent, or about 60tonnes,” she said.

The city has introduced several measures to reduce production and substituteswith greener products.

It has asked plastic production and distribution businesses to set up plans toproduce self-decomposing products by the year 2020.

 “The city set goals of no use ofhard-decomposed nylon bags in all supermarkets and 50 percent decrease of theuse in traditional markets by the end of year 2020,” said Lan.

The city aimed to gradually reduce plastic materials and classify all wastedischarged by factories while also stop to produce disposable products andhard-decomposed nylon bags by the year 2025.

“Understanding the impacts of plastic waste on the environment, a number ofplastic manufacturers and distributors in the city have shifted to make and usebiodegradable bags and natural materials,” said Lan.

However, the change would create difficulties for the manufacturers anddistributors due to high production costs.

Additionally, many enterprises felt worried the environmental-friendly productswould be hard to sell when the use of the products was not compulsory, Lanadded. - VNA
VNA

The Phuoc Thuan Border Guard Station and competent units in Ho Tram commune, Ho Chi Minh City, on June 4 rescued a rare sea turtle caught in a fishing net and safely released it back into the sea.

The elongated tortoise is one of the most beautiful and rare terrestrial tortoise species, listed in both the Vietnam Red Data Book and the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Red List of Threatened Species. It typically inhabits tropical and subtropical forests and plays an important role in maintaining ecological balance. However, due to illegal trade and habitat loss, its wild population has been declining sharply.

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Launched in 2021 with funding from the Norwegian people through WWF-Norway and WWF-Vietnam, the “Hue – Plastic Smart City in Central Vietnam” project aims to help Hue protect rivers, wetlands and coastal ecosystems from plastic pollution while building the city into a model plastic-reduced urban area in central Vietnam.

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Designed to process 2,000 tonnes of waste per day and generate 45MW of electricity for the national grid, the project is the first high-tech waste-to-energy plant in southwestern Hanoi, where large-scale solid waste treatment facilities have long been lacking.

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