Continuing on the environment theme…..

I went to the jam3iya a couple of days ago, and bought alot some stuff for the house. I was on the phone at the cashiers and didn’t pay attention to when the guy was putting my stuff in the plastic bags. When I got back home, I was carrying the stuff from my car to the apartment, and I got worried that I bought alot more than I needed from the number of plastic bags. I carried the stuff back and was shocked to see how they filled every bag!

One plastic bag has 2 SMALL bottles of water, another had a bar of chocolate and 1 yogurt, another had a ketchup bottle and another condiment! All the stuff from the three bags could’ve been put into one bag with more room for something else too!

Why the waste?? I noticed the guys who put the stuff in bags are really more than happy to use as many bags as possible, as if the more bags, the more work they seem to have done!

Plastic bags are major problem for our environment. You see them all the time floating around the water whenever you’re in the sea. They are non-biodegradable, which means “Material that, left to itself, will be NOT be decomposed by natural processes.“  which is obviously a major problem in the long term.

All around the world, countries are taking steps in getting rid of these non-biodegradable plastic bags. France, Ireland, and South Africa are just a few heading in that direction. Plastic bag reduction programs are in effect in several places around the world too.
A simple solution to this problem here for us is to add some sort of incentive to coops from the union of coop society, or whoever supplies them with the plastic bags. The less bags you order as a percentage, the more you get rewarded by the government as encouragement for environmentally friendly programs. It would cut their cost as a coop and it would help the environment!

In other related news, Marks & Spencer announced earlier this week that they will spend $450 million in the next few years in an effort to become more environmentally friendly.  Their announcement said that they will -

cut energy consumption, stock more products made from recycled materials and buy foods closer to home, reducing air freight.

Tesco, another giant UK retailer, followed suit saying that they will also increase their efforts.

Obviously I dont expect our coops to take drastic measures, but I hope someone like The Sultan Center, City Center, and the upcoming Carrefoure take small steps, at least when it comes to plastic. Carrefoure were part of an effort in Singapore in encouraging the use of reusable bags instead of plastic.

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Im glad to say that I have cut down alot on my electricity use at home in recent weeks, and hope to continue with that more as time passes.

Again, everyone can make a difference, at the jam3iya, just tell the guy to put more stuff in each bag, they will do it and you would have helped. I asked yesterday at Sultan Center and the guy did it, and it was actually just easier to carry too!
Again, look at how we contribute to pollution as Kuwaitis, and close the light bulbs you don’t need!
earthtrends.wri.org/pdf_library/country_profiles/cli_cou_414.pdf