In 2016, France became the first country to ban the sale of plastic disposable products that contain less than 50% of biodegradable material and in 2017, India passed a law banning all plastic disposable plastic products.
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@9F7VF5T2yrs2Y
unless it is dishware for a kitchen, at home, yes. if restaurants and other places are using it yes
@9FDBM542yrs2Y
They shouldn't be banned but fazed out of use and replaced with better alternatives
@9FDBHTY2yrs2Y
no but you have to pay a fee for more than that
@95N7VRR3yrs3Y
Yes. Instead make disposable utensils with biodegradable material.
@8TWHGQP4yrs4Y
Make sure disposable items like mentioned be biodegradable to prevent any more pollution
@8DDJKTQ5yrs5Y
every one should get actual cups so they dont need plastic cups
@8CZN5MSNew Democratic5yrs5Y
I don’t even know how to answer this
The issue with products that are biodegradeable is that they, to my knowledge, require cutting down more trees, which doesn't solve any problems. The issue with some environmental movements that I've seen, are only temporary to solve 1 problem, but create or increase the direness of another situation. We need more extreme solutions that eradicate a problem entirely
@9BSMZPF2yrs2Y
Has to be global because other countries are contributing much more than Canada
@98YRRBG2yrs2Y
Yes but I am concerned with how such materials would degrade in nature if they are still mixed with non-biodegradable substances such as plastics. More information required
@8ZYPVGN3yrs3Y
I do not have a say on this matter
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