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Old clothes get new life as shopping bags amid environment drive
25 février 2008, 20:00
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Old clothes get new life as shopping bags amid environment drive
Sixty-year-old Yu Xiuqin always gets the attention of other shoppers, some of whom laugh, when she goes shopping. Yu totes a large bag made of worn-out blue jeans, which she uses instead of taking free plastic bags from retailers.
Last month, authorities in the eastern coastal city of Qingdao launched a campaign to encourage citizens to design environmentally friendly shopping bags. It occurred to Yu, a retired textile worker, that old clothes would do the trick. ?A pair of trouser legs can make a bag, and the rest of the material can make handles,? Yu said. ?It?s much easier to make a skirt into a shopping bag. What?s more, a skirt bag looks more cute with laces.?
?Worn-out jeans are still strong and durable, and it?s a great pity to throw them away,? she added. The central government has ordered a ban on the production, sale and use of ultra-thin bags (defined as less than 0.025 mm thick) as of June 1. Further, supermarkets and shops will be banned from giving free plastic bags to customers as of that date. ?Our country consumes a large amount of plastic bags. While convenient for consumers, the bags also lead to a severe waste of resources and cause environmental pollution because of their excessive use and low rate of recycling,?said a government circular. ?The ultra-thin bags are the main source of ?white pollution? as they can easily get broken and end up as litter.?
Yu recalled that people brought fabric bags of their own while going shopping more than two decades ago.
?Look at the situation now. The ?white pollution? of plastic bags can be seen almost everywhere ? in the streets, on wire poles and in drains, especially on windy days,? she said.
China?s ban on plastic bags, a move to protect the environment and save resources, has won applause worldwide. But Yu thinks that Chinese shoppers have mixed feelings about it.
?People are still unaccustomed to carrying shopping bags themselves, especially bags made of old clothes,? she said. ?Sometimes, other shoppers will laugh at my jeans bag.?
Still, Yu has made more than a dozen bags from recycled clothes and given most of them to her neighbors, some of whom use them while shopping. ?I don?t mind how other people look at my jeans bag. They will accept it eventually,? she said.
She added that she would not like to see ?white pollution? in Chinese cities, especially in Qingdao, where the sailing competition of the 29th Olympic Games will be held from August 9 to 23.
China has achieved outstanding progress in economic development since 1978 when the country initiated the policy of reform and opening up, but at the cost of the environment, energy and resources.
Some major pollution incidents have left bitter memories for Chinese, such as chemical pollution of the Songhua River in northeast China in November 2005 and the blue-green algae outbreak on the Taihu Lake in east China last May. Both incidents meant days of water cuts for millions of residents.
Three decades on, China has realized that economic growth cannot be achieved at the cost of the environment and is acting to address the issue.
<b>© Xinhua</b>
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