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Earth Crime

Mumbai Bans Plastic Bags, Bottles, and Single-Use Plastic Containers (theguardian.com) 174

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian: Mumbai has the become the largest Indian city to ban single-use plastics, with residents caught using plastic bags, cups or bottles to face penalties of up to 25,000 rupees (~$365) and three months in jail from Monday. Council inspectors in navy blue jackets have been posted across the city to catch businesses or residents still using plastic bags. Penalties have already kicked in for businesses and several, reportedly including a McDonald's and Starbucks, have already been fined. Penalties range from 5,000 rupees (~$73) for first-time offenders to 25,000 rupees (~$365) and the threat of three months' jail for those caught repeatedly using single-use plastics.
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Mumbai Bans Plastic Bags, Bottles, and Single-Use Plastic Containers

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Will they have some sort of designated replacement?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I would assume thicker mil plastic bags are allowed since they are considered multi use (according to the state of California.) That seems to be where these laws go. Next, expect harder to decompose plastic bags rolling down the street and a "use tax" to try and curtail even those (like in California.)

      • I really liked the old paper bags. They would easily hold up over multiple uses, and were handy for storage and the like. Back in the 70s many people saved those rather than treating them as disposables (even though disposable was all the fashion in the 70s). You start talking to people who were around in the great depression and they didn't treat anything as disposable.

      • by Bert64 ( 520050 )

        So get the thicker plastic bags and only use them once, making the problem even worse.

  • What about going after the people who make/distribute the bags? If I see someone using (better yet, re-using) an item, that's a good thing. Now you are just going to encourage people to throw them out. In places that won't lead back to them.

  • than every city in the USA. What are we number one at again?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Idiocy maybe?

      Have fun using your paper straws.

    • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Sending people to jail, and imposing massive fines for something like plastic bags isn't "progressive", it's fascist. This sort of zero tolerance, clamp down hard stuff is insane. It seems like both ends of the political spectrum have gotten less and less tolerant, and more and more aggressive in whatever it is they don't like.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        A glimpse into SJW rule.

        Now report to your detention center for an attitude adjustment.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Reducing waste is fascist?

        Have you fucking SEEN the Ganges? That's supposed to be a "sacred" river. It's horrible how much waste is in Indian cities.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      The individual penalty is regressive affecting the ones who can least afford it. Do the wealthy do their own shopping? Go out to a fast food restaurant?

  • That would be more fair.

    And, yes, there have been replacements for plastic bags for decades.

    • That would be more fair.

      And, yes, there have been replacements for plastic bags for decades.

      I'm guessing that 25K rupees is way more than 1/2 of the income of many people who live in Mumbai.

  • "penalties of up to 25,000 rupees (~$365) and three months in jail from Monday."

    That is excessive punishment.
    This is the government using fines to raise revenues.
    Government greed.

    • by stooo ( 2202012 )

      Nope.
      This is the level where all people really take the matter instantly.
      This is the level that really works.
      So it won't really make bucks.

      • ...and what's a few ruined lives in the process? (seriously - those are some pretty massive-assed fines for the average Indian.)

        Even on a smaller scale, now the cost of groceries, take-out, whatever just went up.

        • No, it did not. You only think that because you've externalized the cost of disposing of single use plastic on the world/environment. Charge the appropriate fee for proper disposal, and it's likely this would be a money saving change.

          • by lgw ( 121541 )

            There is no such cost (at least, none worth measuring). There is a cost to not disposing of them, however - letting them litter the streets, dumping them at sea, and so on. Really hard to keep assholes from dumping trash at sea, though.

            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              The cost is in extracting the oil, refining it, manufacturing the plastic bag/straw complete with printed logo, transporting it to the shop, lining the bin to contain it when discarded, transporting the waste to landfill, dumping it, making the landfill site safe, and then at some point in the future dealing with the emissions from decaying plastic.

              It may seem insignificant per individual item, but we are using billions of such items and much of that cost is difficult to directly measure. How much does secu

              • by lgw ( 121541 )

                The cost per item is still trivial, accounting for everything, as long as the plastic makes it to a dump. No problem there. The real world problems we're seeing are from people who lack the basic decency to throw their trash away in the trash, or to not simply dump garbage at sea instead of delivering it to a dump.

      • Nope. This is the level when they pay 10% of the money to the police officer catching them and litter even more.

        Stronger punishment rarely leads to higher compliance - more likelihood of getting caught has a far bigger effect. But strength of punishment is negatively correlated with likelihood of getting caught due to corruptibility of agents of law.

  • Seattle has talked about banning them. That scares the hell out of me.

  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Tuesday June 26, 2018 @05:04PM (#56849920)

    I've used a lot of plastic bags quite a few times.

    I have a Fuji water bottle I bought at an airport that I like the size of, so I've been refilling it for a few years.

    Almost anything CAN be reusable if you try. What a shame they are getting rid of some really useful items that took a long time for human to advance enough to produce.

    • I'm surprised to find I'm not the only one who will re-use the same 'disposable' water bottle for several years. The Aquafina bottle I have at my desk is from 2015 - I go to a local 'water and ice' (a chain here in Arizona) and buy RO water to fill it and several jugs at $0.25/gallon. Granted, while the tap water out here is perfectly safe to drink, it isn't very palatable straight from the tap. Filtering it takes the canal taste out of the water.
      • Why not use a faucet filter (PUR, Brita, etc.)? They are rated at 100 gallons per filter and cost a lot less than $25. Also you wouldn't have to carry jugs of water home from the "water and ice" store.

    • The problem is 99.9999999 of the bottles aren't a "Pet bottle" like your's.
      They are the trash that line our citie's surroundings.
      They're PET bottles, not reusable, not recycled as a matter of fact.

      • The problem is 99.9999999 of the bottles aren't a "Pet bottle" like your's.

        Based on what I have seen I highly doubt the percentage of people re-using light plastic bottles is that low.

        The biggest change around that has been airport bottle filling stations. I see people using those all the time when I fly from old plastic bottles. In fact old plastic bottles are BETTER for this when they are lighter, because they compact flat when empty until you are ready to re-fill.

        So in India for example, you could have

        • by stooo ( 2202012 )

          >> So in India for example, you could have bottle filling stations all around a city an encourage people to use bottles multiple times
          Doesn't work.
          In these countries, people don't trust tap water.

        • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • The problem is 99.9999999 of the bottles aren't a "Pet bottle" like yours

        I assume you meant 99.9999999%. That would mean that only one out of every 1,000,000,000 bottles gets reused. That would mean that out of the 40B bottles used (and not recycled) in the US every year, only 40 of them get reused. Since I personally know a dozen or so people who do this regularly, you've got to be off by a few orders of magnitude.

        (Yes, I'm making a pedantic point about your excessive number of nines. Yes, I know you d

    • context matters. Very, very few people will reuse a thin plastic bottle. I use plastic bags from the grocery store but a) I get more than even I can use (only have 1 dog) and b) they're too flimsy for much else.

      You have to consider what the majority of people are going to do and not what a few outliers do when you make policy.
    • Dunno... BPA would keep me out of doing that. I'll settle for an actual cup.

    • by GNious ( 953874 )

      how much of that bottle has leached into you so far?

      • how much of that bottle has leached into you so far?

        As far as I'm concerned this fear of plastic "leeching" into you in any quantity is right up there with anti-vaxxer nonsense.

        I've used the same bottle for years, and there is absolutely no change in structural strength or even appearance nor taste in the water I fill the bottle with. So how much of it could possibly have "leeched" into me - not to mention that plastic is wholly inert anyway, and even if I chose to eat the bottle it would simply flow throu

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I have a Fuji water bottle I bought at an airport that I like the size of, so I've been refilling it for a few years.

      Based on the water bottles I've seen recently (seriously conference venues: quit with the free plastic bottled water and just put out some glasses and a jug already!) they seem to have move to some sort of super-flimsy plastic that I'd think twice about using more than once for fear of leaks.

      Almost anything CAN be reusable if you try.

      Agreed. Sadly most people seem to work by the logic that things that are cheap/free (or "just" a container you bought something in) then it should be tossed out. Otherwise we wouldn't need tax incentives, bans etc.

      • by lgw ( 121541 )

        Based on the water bottles I've seen recently (seriously conference venues: quit with the free plastic bottled water and just put out some glasses and a jug already!)

        Glasses at a concert venue? The death toll would be massive. There's a reason most festivals ban any sort of glass container.

    • The problem is most people don't reuse them. And if you get a plastic nalgene bottle is lasts much longer than a plastic "disposable" one and is much easier to clean.

    • I've used a lot of plastic bags quite a few times.

      Out of necessity or out of environmental courtesy? One thing we have learnt over the years is that latter doesn't work. The one person who looks after the environment won't offset the other who runs his heater in one room, AC in the other and leaves the door open between them.

      Banning plastic bags forces this issue towards necessity. I too had a re-use bag when I go shopping. I have for many years. I also used biodegradable bin liners. Yet when shops started charging for plastic bags years back people though

  • by BitterOak ( 537666 ) on Tuesday June 26, 2018 @05:06PM (#56849930)

    and the threat of three months' jail for those caught repeatedly using single-use plastics.

    If people are repeatedly using them, they're not single-use plastics, by definition.

    • I'm going to hope they aren't nearly as draconic as that sounds, and that it was more meant that if they catch people making use of disposable plastics and not re-using them. Maybe they're going to go digging through peoples trash?
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Repeatedly using does not mean reusing the same bags in the context of the topic. There is a difference.

      For example, I can repeatedly use pencils to stab you, or I can stab you repeatedly with the same pencil. Still don't understand?

  • Dogs? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by xaosflux ( 917784 ) on Tuesday June 26, 2018 @05:07PM (#56849938) Homepage

    So when you walk your dog - where do you put the poo? In nice breathable paper sacks?

    • by SeaFox ( 739806 )

      So when you walk your dog - where do you put the poo?

      You let the blue-coated inspector stop you and you happily surrender your full bags to them.

    • by stooo ( 2202012 )

      You let it decompose in the forest, like any other animal's poo.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Because of additives to dog food now, dog feces just doesn't decompose like it used to. I live in Seattle and have several neighbors that let their dog poop in my front yard and on my porch. There's a lot of dog feces that have been there for over a year that haven't broken down yet.

    • by idji ( 984038 )
      bioedegrable plastic sacks.
    • Biodegradable ones. Shit man put at least some token effort into engaging your brain rather than (literally) shitting on the environment.

  • by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Tuesday June 26, 2018 @05:17PM (#56849996)

    ...lots of Tupperware parties.

  • by bain_online ( 580036 ) on Tuesday June 26, 2018 @11:23PM (#56851448) Homepage Journal
    *Ahem* Its not just Mumbai, but the whole state of Maharashtra that has banned plastics

    I live in Pune, about 120km east of Mumbai and its the same. Its strange not to get straws to drink soda in McDonalds now. But a good change anyways. The country is getting littered way too much.

    • by Raenex ( 947668 )

      I have another idea. Instead of banning plastic and hiring people to patrol, why don't they just hire people to clean up the litter?

  • drinking from a plastic cup can get you 3 months in jail, all the while nothing much is done about the rape problem they have.

  • Let's see how this plays out. Humanity as a whole needs to move towards zero-garbage. Like, fast.
    A doorstep country showing the first world how it is done is a nice thing indeed.

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