Rwanda's Cabinet last week adopted a draft law seeking to
prohibit the manufacture, use and sale of single-use plastics, a move
that is expected to affect the operations of importers and local
manufacturers.
The passage of the draft came ahead of
the February 1 EAC Summit, in which the region’s heads of state were
expected to assent to the EAC Polythene Materials Control Bill, 2018,
which would see the region adopt a common framework on the elimination
of the use of plastics.
The law seeks a ban on plastic
water bottles, disposables straws, plates, spoons, tumblers and other
products. Once passed by the legislature, it will complement another law
that has existed since 2008 illegalising the use of non-biodegradable
polythene bags.
“The new law will impose a ban on
disposable plastic materials, and the government will be campaigning for
usage of recyclable and non-pollutant disposables,” said Minister for
Environment Vincent Biruta.
Traders and industries that
rely on plastics have called on the government to ensure that policies
are in place to promote alternative products.
“There is
no doubt that companies that rely on plastics are going to be affected;
they will definitely make losses, but they must adjust,” said Wenceslas
Habamungu, the managing director of Ecoplastic Rwanda, a recycling
company.
Rwanda has been successful in curbing the use of plastic bags
through constant police operations at border posts and airports to
monitor and check luggage for banned polythene.
In
2017, Kenya enacted the world’s toughest law against disposable plastic
bags, punishing anyone making, selling or importing plastic bags with up
to four years in prison or up to $40,000 in fines.
Tanzania
announced in 2015 that it would pass a law that banned the use of
plastic bags, but to date the move is still facing multiple challenges
from the country’s manufacturing sector.
The EastAfrican
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