Hanoi (VNA) – Vietnam aims to use 100 percent ofenvironmentally-friendly plastic bags and packaging at shopping malls andsupermarkets by 2025, according to a project on strengthening management ofplastic waste in Vietnam approved by Deputy Prime Minister Le Van Thanh on July22.
Other goals include to collect, reuse, recycle and treat85 percent of plastic waste; to reduce the volume of plastic waste dumped to oceanby half; to have 100 percent of tourism complexes, hotels and other lodging facilitiesnot use non-biodegradable plastic bags and single-use plastic products by 2025.
Additionally, the project will gradually cut theproduction and consumption of non-biodegradable plastic bags and single-useplastic products in daily life; while raising awareness among organisations,enterprises and the community about the harmful effects of single-use plasticitems to the environment, ecosystem and human health, and encouraging consumersto shift away from single-use and non-biodegradable plastics to eco-friendlyalternatives.
It will campaign producers and distributors of single-useand non-biodegradable plastic products to shift to eco-friendly equivalents andpromote the development and application of advanced technology in plastic wastemanagement and manufacturing of environmentally-friendly products.
The project will also build a network of localcommunicators who are tasked to instruct people in how to properly classify, reuseand treat plastic waste and waste at large; and integrate knowledge aboutsingle-use and non-biodegradable plastics into school curriculums at alllevels.
Vietnam is said to be the world's fourth-largest marineplastic polluter after China, Indonesia and the Philippines. Each year, thecountry reportedly dumps an estimate of 300,000 – 700,000 tonnes of plasticwaste into the ocean per year, accounting for 6 percent of the world's marineplastics./.
Other goals include to collect, reuse, recycle and treat85 percent of plastic waste; to reduce the volume of plastic waste dumped to oceanby half; to have 100 percent of tourism complexes, hotels and other lodging facilitiesnot use non-biodegradable plastic bags and single-use plastic products by 2025.
Additionally, the project will gradually cut theproduction and consumption of non-biodegradable plastic bags and single-useplastic products in daily life; while raising awareness among organisations,enterprises and the community about the harmful effects of single-use plasticitems to the environment, ecosystem and human health, and encouraging consumersto shift away from single-use and non-biodegradable plastics to eco-friendlyalternatives.
It will campaign producers and distributors of single-useand non-biodegradable plastic products to shift to eco-friendly equivalents andpromote the development and application of advanced technology in plastic wastemanagement and manufacturing of environmentally-friendly products.
The project will also build a network of localcommunicators who are tasked to instruct people in how to properly classify, reuseand treat plastic waste and waste at large; and integrate knowledge aboutsingle-use and non-biodegradable plastics into school curriculums at alllevels.
Vietnam is said to be the world's fourth-largest marineplastic polluter after China, Indonesia and the Philippines. Each year, thecountry reportedly dumps an estimate of 300,000 – 700,000 tonnes of plasticwaste into the ocean per year, accounting for 6 percent of the world's marineplastics./.
VNA