Single-use plastic shopping bag ban: Facts for businesses
New Zealand banned single-use plastic shopping bags on 1 July 2019. Here is what businesses need to know about the ban.
New Zealand banned single-use plastic shopping bags on 1 July 2019. Here is what businesses need to know about the ban.
From 1 July 2019, when the regulations came into force:
The Ministry encourages voluntary compliance. In the first instance our preference is to take an educational approach and to offer advice to help businesses understand their responsibilities.
The Waste Minimisation Act does allow for fines of up to $100,000 to be issued when parties deliberately contravene regulations under the Act. These fines are not specific to the plastic bag regulations. Any fines will be proportionate to the offence.
The Waste Minimisation (Plastic Shopping Bags) Regulations 2018 [New Zealand Legislation website] took effect on 1 July 2019. From this date retailers can no longer sell or distribute single-use plastic shopping bags to customers for the purpose of carrying or distributing their sold goods.
The regulations were approved and announced in December 2018. This gave businesses a six month period, until 1 July 2019, to transition away from plastic bags. From 1 July 2019 businesses cannot sell or provide single-use plastic shopping bags to customers for the purpose of carrying or distributing their sold goods.
All retailers are affected. The regulations apply to all businesses in New Zealand who sell goods.
This includes:
The regulations apply to plastic shopping bags which meet all of the following criteria.
We acknowledge that the ban may mean that some businesses have a large amount of single-use plastic bags leftover on 1 July 2019.
The decision for a short phase-out period was supported by the majority of submitters during the public consultation phase of the regulations. New Zealanders want less plastic waste. The phase-out of single-use shopping bags will benefit the environment by preventing further circulation and manufacture of these bags.
Local recycling and plastic manufacturers may be able to assist with unused stock. You will need to contact businesses in your area to find out. The policy intention is for the ban to cover plastic bags used for the purpose of taking away or distributing goods from a retailer. It does not prevent retailers from using or giving away leftover stock for other uses. We strongly recommend against sending surplus bags to landfill.
The transition away from single-use plastic shopping bags has been moving quickly. In a survey in September 2018, 50 per cent of New Zealanders reported that they brought their own bags, up from 35 per cent in April 2018.
New Zealand does not yet have the nationwide infrastructure to deliver biodegradable, oxo-degradable and compostable plastics to facilities which can break them down into substances that are safe for nature. In addition, not everyone has a home compost bin and home compost bins are rarely set up with the right conditions and capacity to breakdown these bags properly.
Bio-based bags, including bags marketed as 100 per cent plant-based (eg, cassava or cornstarch), are manufactured through the synthesis of the original plant source into a new resilient material (a bio-plastic) to serve as a carry bag. These bio-bags do not degrade as quickly or easily as their source material, and do not help in the shift from disposal to reusable options.
We encourage you to make your neighbours and other businesses aware of the regulations and where to find information.