In 2016, France became the first country to ban the sale of plastic disposable products that contain less than 50% of biodegradable material and in 2017, India passed a law banning all plastic disposable plastic products.
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@B2SLMQPNew Democratic2mos2MO
Don't ban all of the products because they are cheaper and many people can't afford biodegradable products. Make it a choice.
@9JS8GNH1yr1Y
I don't think they should be bannable, but just raise the price of the plastic stuff without biodegradable material, and lower the price of the biodegradable materials, so then people would buy the more biodegradable products due to it being cheaper.
@9JS8F9S1yr1Y
I think you raise the price of the non-biodegradable so people will buy the biodegradable products. But the governtment will support and fund 15% of the companies making the biodegradable products. But then raise taxes 1.3%.
@999XCCQ2yrs2Y
No, but increase more funds to go towards better reycling systems so more plastic will actaully get recycled.
@965D9WN3yrs3Y
everything but straws, paper straws are nasty
@8R6NT3P4yrs4Y
No, they should increase the tax on nonbiodegradable utensils to encourage a greener approach
@8K83GSZ4yrs4Y
@8K7JTCQConservative4yrs4Y
I think that they should ban most plastic products but some are more convenient to use and once you are done with them you should recycle them
before banning them, Start creating more composable materials and work up to banning the supplies
@8CB4JGP5yrs5Y
Not banned but to make biodegradable more of a norm yes. This could involve making non-biodegradable legal but taboo (not encouraged) Or supporting futures that want biodegradable everywhere
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