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Category: Featured Article English

RECYCLE Packaging

Recycle packaging to reprocess materials into useful products. Improper disposal risks plastic leakage into the environment and contamination of waste streams. It is estimated that only 9% of all plastic ever produced has been recycled. Behaviour change can help increased demand for recyclable plastics. Here are some things you can do: > Consider the other Rs before making a decision to...
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Salt the silent killer in our food

In conjunction with World Salt Awareness Week (8 - 14 March), the Consumers Association of Penang (CAP) calls on consumers to be cautious of their daily salt consumption. A recent study found that Malaysians consume 8.7 grams of salt daily which is 1.7 times higher than the World Health Organisation’s recommendation of 5 grams of salt (or 2,000mg of sodium) a day. One teaspoon or 5grams of...
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REUSE Plastic Items Instead of Trashing Them

Reusing a plastic item to extend its use and lifetime will maximise its utilisation and reduce plastic waste. Reusing your plastic cutlery or going for a compostable alternative could personally save you 466 items of unnecessary plastic every year (WWF). Additionally, converting 20% of plastic packaging into reuse models is a USD 10 billion business opportunity that benefits consumers and...
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REDUCE Plastic Use in Daily Life

Reduce the use and purchase of plastic materials to reduce energy usage, raw materials and landfill waste. Since 1950, close to half of all plastic has ended up in landfill or dumped in the wild, and only 9% of used plastic has been adequately recycled. Reducing plastic consumption can drive government policy and business commitments to eliminate unnecessary plastic. Here are some things you can...
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REFUSE Disposable Plastics

Refusing unnecessary plastic where possible will decrease plastic pollution on nature, wildlife and human health. A survey showed that 74% of consumers are willing to pay for more sustainable packaging. Shifting consumer preference s can encourage FMCG (fast-moving consumer goods) companies and retailers to rethink the plastic system and offer more sustainable alternatives.  Examples of what...
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RETHINK Plastic Use

Re-evaluate consumption habits to minimise plastic use. This will decrease the amount of waste produced and prevent leakage into the environment. Without action, the annual flow of plastic into the ocean could nearly triple by 2040. Rethinking plastics will ensure the value of materials is kept within a ‘closed-loop’ system, encouraging companies to improve approaches to the supply chain....
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REPLACE plastic products or packaging with more sustainable alternatives

  Use alternative materials to plastics for everyday usage to avoid leakage into the oceans and drive demand for environmentally friendly products. About 8 million metric tons of plastic are thrown into the ocean annually (Jambeck, 2015). Shifts in consumer demand can encourage companies to adapt their sustainability agendas to accommodate. Examples of what you can do: > Replace plastic...
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WORLD WILDLIFE DAY: STATES MUST PAY GREATER ATTENTION TO NATIONAL POLICIES AND INTERNATIONAL COMMITMENTS

Today is the World Wildlife Day with a really apt  theme, ‘Forests and Livelihoods: Sustaining People and Plants’. The theme this year was chosen to highlight the central role of forests, forest species and ecosystem functions in sustaining millions of people globally, not only for indigenous and forest-dependent communities but also the public at large. It reminds us of our forgotten...
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