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Black_Beer_Man
Joined: 26 Mar 2013 Posts: 453 Location: Yokohama
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Posted: Tue Feb 16, 2016 2:20 pm Post subject: Japan: The Land of Plastic |
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Has anyone else here noticed Japanese people's obsession with plastic?
1. Shops (especially convenience stores) ALWAYS give you a plastic bag automatically even if you buy one small item like a donut (which is already wrapped in a plastic wrapper)
The worst is dry cleaning shops which wrap your pants in plastic and then give you a thick plastic bag to carry it home in.
2. Fruits in supermarkets (including bananas) are pre-wrapped in plastic bags. Good heavens if another customer touched the bananas before you bought them.
3. Plastic bento boxes in convenience stores by the thousands. Then, they offer to microwave them. I don't want to know if the chemicals in the plastic leech into my food thank you.
4. When you buy a package of cookies, you only get like 12 cookies and a whole lot of plastic including the tray and wrappers from the individually wrapped cookies. I know that some people would worry about Japan's humidity spoiling the cookies if they weren't individually wrapped, but that problem is easily fixed by buying an air-tight food container at a 100 yen shop.
5. Today I saw a box of Kraft macaroni and cheese at an import shop and guess what? It was wrapped in plastic. No other country wraps this product.
6. Ketchup at fast food restaurants here always have thick plastic mini-bowls to dip the fries in. Danm! Again. A Japan only plastic use. Do they really need that?
Soon a plastic monster like Godzilla will arise from Japan's plastic waste and crush Tokyo with its feet. Either that or Japanese people will experience fertility problems and higher cancer rates from the dioxins leeching out from the enormous amount of plastic waste they produce.
They seriously have to watch this video. https://youtu.be/koETnR0NgLY |
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TokyoLiz
Joined: 16 Jan 2003 Posts: 1548 Location: Tokyo, Japan
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Posted: Tue Feb 16, 2016 11:36 pm Post subject: |
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1. At shops and grocery stores, tell the clerk you don't need a bag. The clerk will put tape on unbagged items. Grocery stores will discount your bill by a few yen. Always pack some bags with you.
2. Shoganai. You're living in the land of kirei, where sellers are obligated to protect the cleanliness of the products they sell. Sort packaging at home and follow garbage rules fanatically.
3. Don't buy bento box lunches. Make your own lunch.
4, 5 and 6, see 2.
Japan produces much less waste than many countries, and has a high rate of recycling.
If you are that bothered by the amount of waste you create, grow your own produce. The landlord at my apartment let me grow pumpkins, tomatoes etc. in the garden behind the building.
Buy from grocers, who tend to use less plastic wrapping. My local yaoyasan doesn't package anything. I can bring my own boxes for carrying home fish, eggs and pickles. The tofu shop encourages people to bring their own containers.
You could make a project of not bringing new plastic into your home for a month, and then blog about it... |
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Black_Beer_Man
Joined: 26 Mar 2013 Posts: 453 Location: Yokohama
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Posted: Wed Feb 17, 2016 1:34 am Post subject: |
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TokyoLiz wrote: |
1. At shops and grocery stores, tell the clerk you don't need a bag. The clerk will put tape on unbagged items. Grocery stores will discount your bill by a few yen. Always pack some bags with you.
Japan produces much less waste than many countries, and has a high rate of recycling.
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I would like to see the shops ask the customers if they want bags when the customers buy small items. This would help to create an awareness of plastic waste.
Plastic is never recycled (recycling implies that a used pet bottle becomes a new pet bottle for example). It is "downcycled" which means it is transformed into less useful products like pellets for protecting items in boxes during shipping.
Plastic is an environmental menace. It takes 100's of years to biodegrade.
Recycling is not the answer. Using less is.
First thing to do is get the lazy people in this country who buy convenience store bentos to either cook or eat meals in restaurants. |
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Lamarr
Joined: 27 Sep 2010 Posts: 190
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Posted: Wed Feb 17, 2016 2:25 am Post subject: |
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Black_Beer_Man wrote: |
Recycling is not the answer. Using less is. |
I agree with that. "Industrial" recycling of plastic, paper etc. uses up energy in the process. It's kind of self-defeating, unless the recycling process uses renewable energy. |
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steki47
Joined: 20 Apr 2008 Posts: 1029 Location: BFE Inaka
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Posted: Wed Feb 17, 2016 4:26 am Post subject: Re: Japan: The Land of Plastic |
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Black_Beer_Man wrote: |
4. When you buy a package of cookies, you only get like 12 cookies and a whole lot of plastic including the tray and wrappers from the individually wrapped cookies. I know that some people would worry about Japan's humidity spoiling the cookies if they weren't individually wrapped, but that problem is easily fixed by buying an air-tight food container at a 100 yen shop. |
Several students over the years have told me that there was one case of a person dying from contaminated food. Since then all cookies and such are individually wrapped. Could be an urban legend, but the reaction fits the culture. |
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TokyoLiz
Joined: 16 Jan 2003 Posts: 1548 Location: Tokyo, Japan
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Posted: Wed Feb 17, 2016 4:55 am Post subject: |
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The 4th R - refuse - is where you start, of course. "Rejibukuro iranai desu." |
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rxk22
Joined: 19 May 2010 Posts: 1629
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Posted: Wed Feb 17, 2016 6:55 am Post subject: |
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Lamarr wrote: |
Black_Beer_Man wrote: |
Recycling is not the answer. Using less is. |
I agree with that. "Industrial" recycling of plastic, paper etc. uses up energy in the process. It's kind of self-defeating, unless the recycling process uses renewable energy. |
True, esp for plastic and paper. Aluminum and steel can be recycled essentially forever. While plastics and paper denature and so on |
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