NUS Research: Charging 20 cents per plastic bag may deter use of plastic bags

TehOPengSiuDai

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Local Habit of Discarding Plastic Bags Persists; Study Finds Nearly Half Discard at Least Four Bags Weekly

The habit of discarding plastic bags after shopping remains common among locals. A study found that nearly half of consumers throw away at least four plastic bags each week. The research team pointed out that setting the charge for plastic bags at 20 cents or more could significantly discourage use and wasteful behavior.

A research team from the National University of Singapore recently surveyed 1,953 members of the public to analyze plastic bag usage and their acceptance of plastic bag charges.

The results showed that 26.8% of respondents discarded one to three plastic bags per week, 27.9% discarded four to seven, 13.9% discarded eight to 14, and 7.4% discarded 15 or more per week. Additionally, 24% were more environmentally conscious, discarding only one to three bags per month. The research team did not investigate the specific reasons why respondents discarded the plastic bags.

Regarding acceptance of plastic bag charges, 34.6% of respondents were willing to pay up to 10 cents, and 23.4% were willing to pay up to 5 cents. However, when the charge was raised to 20 cents, the willingness to pay dropped sharply to 10.7%; if the charge exceeded 20 cents, only 4.4% were willing to pay. Another 26.9% of respondents were completely unwilling to pay for plastic bags.

Since July 2023, large supermarket chains with annual sales exceeding 100 million SGD have been required to charge at least 5 cents per plastic shopping bag. This regulation covers nine groups and 17 brands, accounting for about two-thirds of supermarket outlets nationwide.

Associate Professor Wang Jinbin from the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at NUS, a member of the research team, said in an interview that setting the charge at 20 cents or more can effectively reduce plastic bag usage, but the policy should balance environmental goals with public acceptance.

He believes that gradually increasing the fee and introducing incentive mechanisms—such as offering discounts for using personal bags—would help guide people to change their habits while reducing their financial burden and "easing dissatisfaction."

Supporters of Plastic Bag Charges Not Always Willing to Pay

Notably, those who support plastic bag charges are not necessarily willing to pay for them. The survey showed that among supporters of the charge, more than 20% were unwilling to actually pay; even among strong supporters, nearly 10% shared this sentiment.

The research team explained that while these individuals agree that charging for plastic bags is environmentally beneficial, they prefer to respond by bringing their own bags rather than paying extra. In other words, supporters of the policy may not want to spend more, but they are willing to change their behavior.

Wang Jinbin pointed out that while charging fees can initially encourage reduced plastic bag usage, over time, as people become accustomed to the fee, the habit may revert. “If people are not motivated to maintain the change or offered incentives, the policy could gradually lose effectiveness.”

In addition to setting reasonable charges, Wang emphasized the need to consider low-income groups who are more sensitive to price, to avoid increasing their cost of living. He stated that the ultimate goal of the policy is not to collect fees but to reduce plastic bag usage and encourage people to bring their own reusable bags.

He believes that the key to improving policy effectiveness lies in ongoing public education, especially tailoring approaches to different groups.

He said: “We hope the findings will help policymakers understand how different groups view the plastic bag charges and optimize the policy accordingly, such as launching targeted awareness campaigns.”

Housewife Yan Jiaming (45), in an interview, said she usually brings one or two reusable bags when shopping for daily necessities and only pays for plastic bags when she buys a lot.

“In addition to supermarket plastic bags, I also keep bags from buying bread or takeout food for reuse as trash bags.”

Yan's household of five produces a fair amount of daily waste—she typically throws away two to three bags of trash per day.

Commenting on expert suggestions to raise the fee further to reduce plastic bag usage, she admitted it could affect her usage habits. “I would reduce my usage, but I’ll still need to use them when necessary. Unless garbage can be disposed of directly, we still need plastic bags for trash.”
Who is this Wang Jiao Bin? New Shitizen mah? So he never bags his trash up before throwing it away in the bin???

Where do all these people come from? How come nobody uses plastic bag to bag all their wet waste before throwing it away? :unsure:
 

TehOPengSiuDai

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No. The researchers specifically avoided the question on why the bags were discarded

The research team did not investigate the specific reasons why respondents discarded the plastic bags.
Dunno what half-baked research was done and can proudly announce their half-baked findings. Xiasuay to the max. Please ask them come interview me, I will tell them how I reuse the plastic bags and also ask them how they bag their wet waste like bones, fruit peels, vegetable roots, leftover sauces etc…
 

kan-kon

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can dis researchers find solution hao to throw rubbish on HDB without plastic bags ornot??
 

RedOrion

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Half of those who interviewed do not resuse plastic bags for other purposes.
They are probably not locals or too rich to bother about wasting plastics bags.

But yet idiots keep suggesting ideas to punish those who recycle plastic bag, reuse and too poor to keep wasting such resources.
 

TehOPengSiuDai

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Sure, it's going to reduce plastic bag usage.

But can businesses and govt handle the backlash?

Businesses that charge first will lose their customers to those who delay the increase in price.

To be fair the govt will probably standardize the date to start, but it's going to invite the wrath of the voters.

Sure, increase the price lor. See how much loss in popularity can the govt tank.
What wrath of voters or loss in popularity you talking about? 65% already gave them mandate! Now KPKB abit too late liao.
 

psyger-zero

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Zaobao: 近半受访者每周丢逾四个塑料袋 收费2角可改使用习惯

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Summary:
According to a NUS research, near to half of the interviewees threw away 4 plastic bags on the average per week. Charging 20 cents per plastic bag may "change this habit".


This is not even a test balloon anymore. When such news comes out, we can be quite sure that it would be implemented. Never mind the sample size/cpmposition, the need to bag rubbish before disposing, or the use of incinerators on most of the rubbish here.

With 66% strong mandate, what is there to deter them?
Siao lang gong siao wei
 

wongkc

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Whats new?

PAP solutions to ANY problems... is to make you Pay And Pay...
 

Prime 13

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What's the cheapest item on sale in NTUC? Might be able to make a job out of this haha.

The 50 cents can be given as discount at checkout.
Or can be implemented as a certain percentage of total cost at checkout or full 50 cents whichever ish lower.

Nao Sg ish Smart Nation.
Thish kind of thing ish very easy to implement.
And sure to hab widespread support.
 

Dracky

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I don't see plastic bags as environmentally problematic. If we all switch to paper bags, more trees will have to be felled and you can't even use paper bags to hold anything in wet weather.
 
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