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Pupils hope that green
initiative will be in the bag
SCHOOLCHILDREN have been helping
their town in its bid to go plastic- bag free.
Youngsters at Emsworth Primary School
have got stuck in helping the town scrap plastic
carriers and replace them with reusuable fabric
bags.
Not only have they been helping the Emsworth
Business Association hand out free fabric bags to
every home in the town, they have also tried
designing their own versions.
As part of their design and technology studies they
have come up with their own designs for bags that
are reusable.
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Pupils from Emsworth Primary School – Chloe Lewis,
Tia Heeley, Matthew Robbins, Lodovica Puxeddu,
Jordan Fleet and Hayden Gwyn, with cotton bags they
gave out to residents of Emsworth to promote less
use of plastic carrier bags PICTURE: ALLAN HUTCHINGS
(075069-445)
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Brendan Gibb-Gray, chairman of the
Emsworth Business Association, said: 'We have had
great support and it has been great to see the
schoolchildren getting involved.'
Volunteers have delivered a free bag to all 4,500
homes in Emsworth. |
Shops
urged: Get drastic over plastic

Eco bags are being delivered to every home in Emsworth in a bid
to turn it into a plastic bag free town.
The Emsworth Business Association, backed by Friends of the
Earth, has paid for all 4,500 homes to get a free fabric bag.
They hope shoppers will use it, rather than picking up plastic
ones that can damage the environment.
In the past few days, 42 volunteers have spent hours going
around the streets of Emsworth delivering the bags, and every
home is expected to have one by the end of the week.
Brendan Gibb-Gray, chairman of the Emsworth Business
Association, hopes people use the bags and encourages them to
shop locally.
‘If even five per cent of people use them and use Emsworth it
will make a big difference to the traders,’ he said.
‘With the competition from supermarkets, that’s having an impact
on them.
‘We are vulnerable and we have got to attract more people to
shop here. The first people we’ve got to attract are our own
residents.
‘I’m confident that the bags will remind people of the
environment but also of Emsworth and the shopping available
here.’
Mr Gibb-Gray said that he was amazed by all the people who have
been helping deliver the bags, including schoolchildren.
‘The response from the residents here is that they think that it
is an excellent idea,’ he said.
‘When we were stuffing the bags in envelopes more than 30 people
turned up to help from all over the community.’
He said the next step in the bid to go green is to urge traders
in Emsworth to stop offering shoppers plastic bags in their
stores.
‘It would be unrealistic to say that plastic is going to
disappear overnight because it won’t.
‘What we are trying to do is reduce it.
The evidence is that people are asking for fewer plastic bags
and traders are saying “do you really need a plastic bag?”.
The News 5th December 2007
Town gears up to end
plastic shopping bag culture
MORE than 5,000 cloth shopping bags are to be handed out to
households in Emsworth in a bid to ban the plastic carrier bag.
The re-usable bags are in the Brookfield Hotel, Emsworth,
waiting to be delivered to every home in the town.
Friends of the Earth is stepping up pressure on Havant also to
pledge to become plastic bag free.
The organisation plans to write to Sandy Hopkins, managing
director of Havant Borough Council, to urge the council to seek
to be a plastic carrier bag-free zone.
Ray Cobbett, the pressure group's Hampshire co-ordinator, said:
'Local authorities have got no power to stop the use of plastic
bags but it would be showing leadership to encourage people to
think about use of plastic bags.'
In Emsworth the fabric bags, paid for by the Emsworth Business
Association, urge people to 'Take me shopping in Emsworth. Make
a difference'.
Next week a team of volunteers will take to the streets to push
a bag through every letter box.
Amanda Thomas, manager of the Brookfield Hotel and treasurer of
the Emsworth Business Association, said: 'I think the bags will
be a desirable little shopping bag for people.
'I think it's absolutely brilliant that this is happening.
'Emsworth is so good at initiating different things.
'It's exciting that we are making a difference.'
She said the next step would be to encourage traders to stop
using plastic bags altogether.
This would be by having only reusable bags available for people
who do their shopping in the town.
The News 20th November 2007
The town that wants to ban plastic carrier bags
By Jenny Haworth
TRADERS in a bustling market town want to ban the traditional
plastic carrier bag from its streets.
However, shopkeepers in Emsworth face one obstacle from becoming
totally carrier free – retail giant Tesco.
The firm has said that it will not sign up to a total ban on
bags.
Emsworth – which has 117 shops – wants to become only the second
place in England to bring in such a ban.
If the scheme goes ahead, shops would stop supplying bags.
Instead shoppers would have to take their own bags with them to
buy groceries, or pay for a reusable or biodegradable bag, which
will have a special logo.
The Emsworth Business Association is behind the idea and says
the bags are clogging up landfill and damaging the environment
as they are not recyclable.
EBA chairman Brendan Gibb-Gray said he was disappointed by
Tesco's stance.
He said: 'To refuse this scheme sends out completely the wrong
message about becoming environmentally friendly.
'It seems that unless the big stores come up with the idea
themselves they are not interested in listening to anyone else.
But it won't stop the scheme rolling out to all other stores and
we can just hope Tesco will change their mind.'
The association, which has 96 members, decided to press forward
with the plan at their last meeting.
Mr Gibb-Gray said. 'We would like to set an example. This would
be good for the environment and it would be good for Emsworth.
We have to start considering ways in which we can reduce our
landfill. We all love England. It's green and pleasant but it
won't stay like this unless we take some positive action.'
The first town to ban the supply of plastic carrier bags was
Modbury in Devon.
Ray Cobbett, Hampshire co-ordinator for Friends of the Earth,
who is helping to set up the scheme, visited Modbury.
'It
really works,' he said. 'You can't get a plastic bag there for
love nor money. You have to take your own bag.
'I think it sends the right message. There are trillions of
these bags in existence and they take 500 years to decay.'
Tesco spokeswoman Sarah Ryle said: 'Tesco would not impose a
measure like that but we would actively encourage them to save
more carrier bags.'
She said customers have an incentive to reuse their bags, with
its Green Clubcard points scheme, in which shoppers get clubcard
points that can be used to get money off goods if they reuse
bags.
'The key thing is that customers have a choice and we are
actively incentivising it for them to use alternatives and not
to automatically take a carrier bag,' she said.
The company said the scheme has been a huge success, and Tesco
has given out 600 million fewer carrier bags since it was
launched in August last year.
The News 11th
July 2007
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