Single-use plastics have become a forgotten issue for the Queensland government, according to a veteran campaigner key to the implementation of the Containers for Change program.
Light-weight shopping bags were banned in 2018. Other banned items include plastic straws, plates and cutlery, and cotton buds with plastic stems, but no new bans have been brought in since September 2023.
Four more possible bans in September 2024 had been part of a single-use plastics road map released in 2022, which the Labor government paused in May that year to wait for a national meeting to align states on the issue.
By the time that meeting occurred, they’d lost the 2024 election.
Toby Hutcheon from the Boomerang Alliance, which represents 55 environmental groups across Australia, said Queensland was falling behind other states.
“Nothing seems to be happening with phasing out the next tranche of problem single-use plastics,” he said.
The Boomerang Alliance began in the early 2000s, advocating for a return system for cans, which would eventually become Containers for Change.
One item on the nixed road map was plastic cups. In 2023, Stadiums Queensland ran a successful trial for reusable cups at a few of their stadiums and were keen to implement it, only they hit a snag: there is no facility in Queensland that can clean that many cups.
That could become an issue when the Olympics come to town due to sustainability policies for the event. Reusable cups were used at the Paris Olympics, the organisers of the 2028 Los Angeles Games have committed to all cups and food trays being reusable, recyclable or compostable at local facilities.
Environment Minister Andrew Powell, who was recently made the Olympics Minister too, refused to answer direct questions about reusable cups or further single-use plastic bans, but said the government was working on a new waste and recycling strategy that will be released this year.
Reusable cups are already being used at major stadiums in Western Australia, and Hutcheon said other states were moving on with banning single-use plastics while Queensland has stood still.
He said bans on supermarket plastics like produce bags, fruit stickers and polystyrene trays are all important next steps, but plastics that more commonly create litter and can break down into microplastics are essential.
“A key one is coffee cups and plastic cups, particularly those that are used away from home,” he said.
The Boomerang Alliance is currently running a trial in Port Douglas where 10,000 reusable coffee cups are used at cafes on the main street, which can be deposited in return bins on the street.
While the state government funded that project, Hutcheon said it must be done at a larger scale and with a ban on plastic-lined coffee cups.
Announcing the new road map in March, Powell promised a plan, but little else.
“We’re getting on with the job of ensuring Queensland is in the best position to attract the investment needed to future-proof Queensland’s waste system, reduce what goes to landfill and boost recycling ,” he said.
Start the day with a summary of the day’s most important and interesting stories, analysis and insights. Sign up for our Morning Edition newsletter.
From our partners
Read the full article here















