Sustainability Advertising in Hong Kong

Mike Catherall
In Hong Kong, they have recently introduced a campaign to stop using plastic bags on the first Tuesday of every month. This is a great idea, mostly for awareness about something we don't really consider in our everyday hustle and bustle. If nothing else, it will reduce the consumption by that much twelve times a year, and let us all breathe a little easier in the long run.

When you really think about how many bags the average person uses the numbers are alarming. Factories around the world manufacture 4.5 trillion bags a year. To top that off, each year, residents of Hong Kong go through 33 million plastic bags, which is about five per person per day. That's a lot of landfill and forest.

Plastic bags are made of polyethylene and are hazardous to manufacture. They can take up to a 1,000 years to decompose. In addition to filling landfills and polluting the air they have been linked to flooding in poorer countries due to clogging and provide a brilliant breeding ground for mosquitos, thus indirectly contributing to malaria in these areas.

In Ireland they adopted a policy where plastic bags cost one euro at the checkout counter. When it came time to decide between a half pint at the local or the newfound use of the chin to carry product, they opted for merriment and consumption droppd by an incredible 90%.

The campaign to stop using bags on the first Tuesday of every month is still in its infancy, but it is a good idea. What it ineeds is a wild guerilla advertising campaign to really get people talking. We'll see what direction it takes as it unfolds.