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WHAT, NO BAGS?
When I first moved to Sicily, it was virtually impossible to purchase a simple shopping bag of the kind you can buy in any supermarket or indoor market in the UK. When I was out I never saw a man or woman carrying a shopper, unless it was by Gucci. Indeed, when I ventured out armed with my faithful British shopping bag Rosa, in particular, used to tell me that a woman carrying two bags looked odd. Well, all that may be about to change as Italy introduced a blanket ban on plastic carrier bags in stores from January 1st. Whilst environmentalists have welcomed the ban, store managers have been predicting chaos and warning that the country's environmental crisis will worsen, as people will no longer be able to recycle store plastic carriers as rubbish bags and will just go out and buy lots of oversized black bags. Italy is responsible for 25% of the plastic bags used in the EU each year or approximately 300 bags per person annually and, whilst I appreciate that the ban has been introduced partially to avoid scenes like the one below, I personally regard the ban as a nuisance: It is not always possible to know how many bags you will need before you shop and paper bags disintegrate in the rain - not a concern for those who shop by car but a problem for the rest of us. It is true that local councils in Italy have been trying, with little success, to get people to separate their rubbish but it is hard to keep a check on this in a country where most people live in flats and take their rubbish to communal containers. In my view an education campaign is needed to raise awareness about the consequences of not recycling while Napoli-style bag mountains can best be avoided by paying refuse collectors their salaries on time! So far I have seen no chaos in my local supermarket and neither have I seen any alternative to plastic bags but this may be because stores are being allowed to use up their current supply of carriers provided they do not charge for them. Cloth bags are on sale in some stores but I have not seen any durable, PVC bags of the type you can buy cheaply in Britain. But then, I have never seen a wipe-clean PVC apron on sale here either and I am sure this is because Italian women prefer aprons that they can iron. So now I am waiting to see if they will start washing and ironing their cloth bags. I wouldn't put it past the perfectionist Sicilian housewife!
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