K. Male'
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31 May 2021 | Mon 15:34
Beach cleanup programmes are held in the Maldives
Beach cleanup programmes are held in the Maldives
Ashwa Faheem
Ban of single-use plastic in Maldives
Changes brought to deadline for ban on import of single-use plastics
 
President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih had earlier declared a list of single-use plastics to be banned for import into Maldives to come into effect starting Tuesday
 
Customs will be allowing the import of shipments for which airway bills were issued before June 1
 
The changes were brought due to the evolving situation of the Covid-19 pandemic

The deadline for a ban on the import of nine plastic-based items has been pushed back.

Making the announcement publicized in the government gazette, the Ministry of Economic Development revealed that the changes stemmed from the evolving Covid-19 situation and difficulties facing imports to the Maldives due to precautionary measures.

The ministry revealed that the Maldives Customs Service will be allowing the import of shipments for which the bill of lading or the airway bill was issued before Tuesday. This will be effective even if the shipment arrives after June 1.

The decision was made to pave eases for shipping delays in the face of the pandemic, and to ease the burden on businesses and importers during the crisis.

Items banned for import into the Maldives starting June 1 are

  • Plastic drinking straws
  • Imported sweet areca nuts wrapped in plastic
  • Single-use plastic-based plates, cutleries and stirrers
  • Styrofoam lunch boxes
  • Plastic shopping bags below 30x30cm including oxo-degradable and synthetic polymer-based biodegradable plastics
  • Single-use plastic cups below 250ml
  • Cotton buds with plastic stems
  • Shampoo and soap bottles in plastic packaging that are 50ml and below
  • All imported beverages in PET bottles below 500ml (water, carbonated and non-carbonated drinks)

Further, the government will be imposing a ban on plastic shopping bags below 50-micron thickness including oxo-degradable and synthetic polymer-based biodegradable plastics as well as shampoo and soap bottles in plastic packaging from 50ml to 200ml starting from 1 December 2022. Import of all imported water that is one liter and below packet in PET packaging will be banned from 1 December 2023 as well.

President Ibrahim Mohamed Solih had declared a list of single-use plastics to be banned for import into Maldives earlier, to come into effect on June 1.

The president approved the plan to phase out single-use plastics in the Maldives by the year 2023, during November 2020. In December last year the People’s Majlis passed the 18th amendment to the Export-Import Act of the Maldives following which the president ratified the legislation the same month.

The amendment gave the president authority to compile and publish a list of goods prohibited to be imported to Maldives, the president may also add and remove goods from the list. Under the amendment, the government is mandated to compile and publicize the list of banned single-use plastics, including the date from which the changes are to come into effect, before January 1, 2021.

Parliament in mid-2019 passed a resolution to ban single-use plastics in Maldives from 2025 onward, after students from a number of schools collectively submitted a proposal that details the dangers of single-use plastic.

In December 2018, the president launched a campaign to eliminate single-use plastic. The government’s vision to phase out single-use plastics from the Maldives by the year 2023, was initially announced during Solih’s maiden trip to New York to attend the 74th session of the United Nations General Assembly, held in 2019.

It was introduced at the session as a government pledge, reiterated in the incumbent government’s 2019-2023 Strategic Action Plan (SAP) which envisages Maldives' waters to be cleared of plastic pollution by the year 2023.

Minimizing the use of single-use plastics was also one of Solih’s first 100-day-pledges. Since the Solih administration came into power, several government institutions alongside restaurants and cafés have stopped using plastic.

Last updated at: 2 years ago
Reviewed by: Imad Latheef
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