Under the ban, retailers are no longer allowed to supply shoppers with single-use lightweight plastic shopping bags under 35 microns – in other words, those standard grey bags that you may recognise from holding all of your groceries. These bags are going to disappear completely and cannot be purchased no matter how desperate you are (so don’t go thinking you can just buy plastic bags if you forget, you sneaky sausage). Even the bags that claim to be compostable, degradable and biodegradable are out, as they break down in the environment in the same way as conventional plastic shopping bags and are essentially no better.
Your mind may immediately default to supermarkets, but Queensland’s plastic shopping bag ban will affect retailers of all kinds. Greengrocers, bakeries, chemists, restaurants and clothes stores, as well as market-stall holders and organisations that supply plastic shopping bags, are all included in the ban along with your standard supermarkets. Any retailer can choose to provide and charge for alternative bags, which can include reusable heavy-duty plastic bags, woven polypropylene bags, paper or other bags. You can take a look at the examples here.
If you would like to know more about the plastic bag ban, head to the Queensland Government’s official website. In the meantime, we would suggest stocking up on rad sustainable shopping bags.