On 28thFebeuary, 2017, the government of Kenya banned the use,manufacture and importation of all plastic bags used for commercial and household packaging defined as follows: carrier bags and
flat bags. This has in return created a wave of uncertainty despite the fact
that there has been a conversation around the use of plastic bags for over ten
years.
After the gazette Notice was issued, Kenya Association of Manufacturers
and Consumer Federation of Kenya issued a statement on the same. See the KAM
statement here:
Whereas I am not a
trained environmentalist, I have a passion for the environment and this
explains why I had to take my dad heads on when he threw a plastic soda bottle
through the car window on our way from the village to the Capital City-Nairobi.
I had to let him know that he has no right to complain that our drainage is
clogged during the rainy season as he is part of the problem. Whereas this was
a dad-son conversation, I am sure that he will in future restrain himself from
doing so. I was lucky to have mum on board as she knows very well where my heart
is when it comes to matters environment. My mum runs a small roadside grocery
shop where she uses plastic carrier bags a lot. In this regard, Mrs. Me (My
wife) and I have this deal; dispose not any plastic carrier bags if they have
not shifted to the second or third hand. To make sure that this deal sees the
light of the day, we ensure that 99% of our super market branded carrier bags
are collected and when we have a substantial amount of them, we take them to
mum where in return she gives them to customers who buy large quantities of
groceries.
The battle goes beyond
large sizes of paper bags. Whereas the carrier bags and the flat bags are the
ones that have been banned, I have in the past had to make my wife understand
why she comes across sweet wrappers and Njugu Karanga wrappers in my pockets as
she does her laundry. This is for the simple reason that I don’t throw away such papers carelessly but have to
carry them home and in return put them in our dustbin save for the few times that I forget doing so and am sure this
irritates her! Am however glad that she now understands why and she is now my
partner in plastic paper waste management.
For an observant
person, a visit to City Park Hawkers market makes one notice a unique shopping
trend. In here, Indian shoppers usually come with large baskets that they use
to do their shopping hence minimizing the use of Plastic bag carriers. Whereas
I have not had time to inquire whether this is a cultural trend or a calculated
move to reduce use of plastic bags, the shopping trend cannot go un noticed and
the role that it plays in conserving our environment cannot be ignored as this
is ‘not very Kenyan’.
Recently, the sad
reality hit me once more on my way from Nairobi to the village as the matatu
driver who was ferrying us first threw a soda bottle, later bought sugar cane
and after chewing the same threw the trash through the window and to add salt
to injury, another young lady who was in the same matatu threw her yoghurt
packages through the window with less care. In short, the level of awareness on
plastic paper waste management is very low and I hope NEMA and other agencies
will be working on this within the six months set dead line.
At another shopping
center, i met Wachira, my long time business buddy who sells Kerosene and
plastic papers and asked him how he was planning to survive beyond the ban.
Whereas he was blank, we had to agree that he has to now find opportunities to
make money beyond the ban hence he must start to scout for alternatives and
cash in on the same.
Whereas much of the
conversation has been on how difficult it will be to enforce this ban, Rwanda government launched a policy to ban all non-biodegradable
plastic from the country several years ago. In the year 2008, while the rest of the world
was barely starting to consider a tax on single-use plastic bags, the small
East African Nation decided to ban them completely-The Guardian. At the Airport, agents from the Rwanda
Environmental Management Authority ensure that that no one takes in plastic
paper into this clean country. Since 2008, anyone arriving in Rwanda is ordered
to give up their plastic or have it confiscated. Flight attendants pre-warn
passengers as they land in the capital Kigali and authorities are braces to
seize this new form of contraband at the border with other African Nations.-France254.com.
In return Rwanda was awarded the cleanest city in Africa by U.N. Habitat but
this came at a cost. See: https://qz.com/509948/kigali-is-africas-cleanest-city-but-that-comes-at-a-heavy-price/
In Kenya, Solid Waste
management is a multi-billion cartel controlled venture where resistance from
such quotas will be expected. Despite the existence of a National Solid Waste Management Strategy in Kenya, plastic papers form a bulk of this waste that even the 200 Million exercise duty collected by the government cannot foot the cost of managing it. Whereas this is a serious headache, plastic Carrier bags manufacturers will be
expected to put up a spirited fight too.
However, the government must enlist
the support of all stakeholders like it did during the second generation brew
fight if the ban is to see the light of the day. Milk vendors, groceries
vendors and Kerosene vendors will also be expected to play a huge role if the
ban is to bear fruit. Like petrol stations, they must insist that one has to
come with a plastic bottle or jerry can if he/she has to purchase these
products. Proper training of enforcement
officers especially those at the boarders will also be a welcome move but
without a well laid down anti-corruption strategy, several setbacks will be expected
as black markets will thrive under the watch of the same enforcement officers.
The government should
also move with speed to support private sector ventures that are involved in
plastic paper recycling whereas companies that used to manufacture such bags
must be given tax incentives and encouraged to start recycling plants too.
Revival of the Sisal Industry will also go a long way towards ensuring that the
ban is sustainable whereas use of reeds, water hyacinth and other locally
available bio-degradable materials will create more options for consumers of
shopping carriers. There is a very huge
opportunity for the women and youth groups to cash in on this ban. Kiondo that
has almost become extinct is bound to re surface where with minimum
modification; they urban folks will not find it difficult to carry it as they
head for shopping.
Women weaving Kiondos |