Earlier this month all 33 London Councils voted for legislation to prevent the free distribution of plastic bags in the city, a decision which comes towards the end of a year of significant change for shopping as we know it. In recent years it has become the expected norm to receive plastic bags free of charge whether in the supermarket, on the high street or at the local corner shop, but that tide is turning as consumers become conscious of the negative environmental impact this has. UK Energy Saving has therefore taken a look back over the past year and charted some of the key changes along the way.
The consumer website, http://www.uk-
At the end of April, photographer Rebecca Hosking led the town of Modbury in Devon to outlaw plastic bags completely. Every trader in the town agreed to sell different types of bag, and there are now approximately 80 other small towns throughout the UK which have or are in the process of following suit. A few months after this landmark shift in attitude, Green England launched a petition for a 10p tax on plastic bags, which was presented to the government with 10,000 signatures in September. The government has not yet acted on this and seems to be against imposing a tax, but charging for carrier bags is starting to happen in some locations. Marks & Spencer, for example, announced in November that they would be charging for bags in the South West of England following a successful trial in Northern Ireland.
All of these events, culminating so far in the London decision to outlaw free plastic bags, will perhaps make 2007 a key year in the move away from a practice which poses a number of environmental problems, not least the use of oil in their production and the landfill space required for their disposal. Hayley Jones, Marketing Director for http://www.uk-


