Plastic-free and plastic-restricted meals: the internal and external contradictions of Hong Kong's new environmental policy – BBC News

  • Ye Jingsi
  • BBC Chinese reporter reports from Hong Kong

A Hong Kong Tanzai Yunnan Rice Noodles chain restaurant displayed an advertisement at the cash register that required a fee for providing takeaway tableware (22/4/2024)

Image source,AFP

image caption:Hong Kong's “plastic-free order” has been called the “strictest plastic restriction order in history” by foreign media and netizens, and its start has been by no means smooth.

On a street in a market in Hong Kong, a couple in their 40s just walked out of a dim sum takeaway shop. In the plastic bag were two boxes of the classic Cantonese “盅頭饭” and a stack of spoons – the reason I say “a stack” is because they were made of paper.

“If we take it back, we will just throw it away. I'll use the tableware at home anyway.” The husband said calmly, but this sentence implies that a disposable (disposable) tableware will end up in the trash without even having the chance to be used.

“Plastic ban” has gradually become popular around the world. On April 22, Hong Kong took advantage of World Earth Day to implement a policy of “controlling disposable plastic tableware and other plastic products”, which is also known as the “plastic ban”. Some foreign media or Internet celebrities even described it as “the strictest plastic ban in history”. Now this policy has reached its full month.

However, the replacement of disposable plastic tableware with paper and wooden ones has caused a lot of grief online, and some restaurants have not made any moves during the first six months of implementation as they are in the adaptation period. What went wrong?

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