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European Legislation Creates Opportunity for Paper Carrier Bags

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According to a report by CEPI Eurokraft, Stockholm, Sweden, the European Parliament has recently voted in favor of amending the Packaging and Packaging Waste Directive. The new legislation, which is designed to regulate plastic carrier bags less than 50 µm thick, opens up a great opportunity for paper carrier bags.

The new way the law is written gives national governments two ways to implement regulation: they can either reduce consumption to 90 plastic carrier bags per citizen/year by 2019 and 40 bags/year by 2025, or introduce a mandatory charge for shoppers by 2018. Today, every EU citizen uses about 198 plastic carrier bags each year.

The aim of this new legislation is to reduce plastic waste in the environment. Yearly, more than 8 billion plastic bags end up as litter in Europe alone. Littering of plastic carrier bags leads to a widespread problem of adding non-biodegradable rubbish to water bodies, threatening aquatic ecosystems worldwide. Furthermore, littering of plastic carrier bags is an inefficient use of resources since they are made from fossil materials.

As an alternative, paper carrier bags have some exceptional environmental credentials that no other bag types have: they are natural, more biodegradable and recyclable, come from an infinitely renewable resource, and are produced in a sustainable manner. Paper carrier bags are strong, have excellent printability, can have either a glossy or a smooth surface, and have very good stiffness to keep the packed goods safe.

Paper carrier bag producers are now preparing for an increase in demand for their products when fossil-based plastic bags in supermarkets and other shops have to be replaced.
 

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