Italy to ban plastic shopping bags on Jan. 1

MILAN, (Reuters Life!) – Italy, one of the top users  of plastic shopping bags in Europe, is banning them starting  Jan. 1, with retailers warning of chaos and many stores braced  for the switch.

Italian critics say polyethylene bags use too much oil to  produce, take too long to break down, clog drains and easily  spread to become eye sores and environmental hazards.

Italians use about 20 billion bags a year — more than 330  per person — or about one-fifth of the total used in Europe,  according to Italian environmentalist lobby Legambiente.

Starting on Saturday, retailers are banned from providing  shoppers polyethylene bags. They can use bags made of such  material as biodegradable plastic, cloth or paper.

Other European countries have tried voluntary schemes to cut  plastic bag use, such as promoting reusable cotton bags. In 2002  Ireland imposed a levy on bags of 15 euro cents (20 U.S. cents)  that cut use by 90 percent within a week.

“You are talking of a revolution that is already under way,”  Legambiente scientific chief Stefano Ciafani said of the shift  to biodegradable bags.

Two hundred municipalities out of Italy’s 8,000 have  introduced their own plastic bag bans, including the cities of  Turin and Venice, Ciafani said.

Many supermarket chains have started using biodegradable  bags for shoppers even if not on a nationwide basis, Legambiente  says on its website.

Legislation on the bag ban was set in December 2006 with an  original deadline of January 2010. The halt was delayed because  of industry opposition but was pushed through by Environment  Minister Stefania Prestigiacomo in a blanket decree last week.

Federdistribuzione, Italy’s retailers association, said the  Jan. 1 deadline could lead to “chaos” and poor service for  shoppers given lack of detail in the decree, business newspaper  Il Sole 24 Ore said this week.