Dhaka monument, for article on Bangladesh plastic bag ban

Bangladesh becomes first country to ban thin plastic bags

In 2002 C.E., Bangladesh made history by becoming the first nation on Earth to ban thin plastic bags — a decision driven not by abstract environmentalism, but by an urgent, practical crisis unfolding in its streets and waterways.

What the evidence shows

  • Plastic bag ban: Bangladesh enacted its national prohibition on thin polyethylene bags in 2002 C.E., making it the first country in the world to take this step.
  • Flooding crisis: Investigations found that discarded plastic bags were clogging drainage systems across Dhaka and other cities, significantly worsening the catastrophic floods that regularly devastated the country.
  • Global ripple effect: Bangladesh’s decision preceded a wave of similar national and local bans — by 2018 C.E., the United Nations Environment Programme had counted 127 out of 192 reviewed countries enacting some form of legislation to address plastic bag pollution.

A bag’s unlikely origin story

The thin plastic bag is a surprisingly recent invention. In 1965 C.E., Swedish company Celloplast patented the one-piece polyethylene shopping bag, designed by engineer Sten Gustaf Thulin. It spread across Europe within a decade.

By 1979 C.E., plastic bags controlled 80 percent of the bag market in Europe and were moving aggressively into the United States and beyond. By the end of the 1980s, they had almost entirely replaced paper bags worldwide. The speed of that displacement — driven by low cost and heavy industry marketing — was remarkable.

It took only a few more decades for the consequences to become undeniable.

Why Bangladesh acted first

Bangladesh is one of the most flood-prone nations on the planet. When monsoon rains hit, drainage systems in cities like Dhaka are a matter of life and death. Authorities discovered that discarded plastic bags — lightweight, durable, and essentially immortal — were jamming those drains and turning manageable flooding into disasters.

The link between the bags and the floods was specific and provable. This wasn’t a distant environmental concern. It was a public safety emergency happening right now, in dense urban neighborhoods, during every rainy season.

That specificity mattered. It gave the government of Bangladesh a clear, evidence-based reason to act — and act they did. The ban on thin plastic bags under a certain thickness was signed into law in 2002 C.E., more than a decade before most wealthy nations began seriously considering similar policies.

What came after

The world took notice — slowly, then faster. Countries across Africa, South Asia, and eventually Europe began enacting their own restrictions. In 2019 C.E., the European Union’s Single-Use Plastics Directive took effect, targeting plastic bags and other common throwaway items. China, which has some of the world’s largest plastic consumption, committed to national single-use plastic reduction in 2020 C.E.

International momentum toward a legally binding global plastics treaty has been building since at least 2021 C.E., when Peru, Rwanda, and Japan each introduced draft resolutions at the United Nations. The UNEP has continued to coordinate global anti-plastic efforts as part of broader campaigns including its #BeatPlasticPollution initiative.

Meanwhile, scientists have continued documenting the scale of the problem Bangladesh tried to address first. Sailor and researcher Charles Moore discovered the Great Pacific Garbage Patch in 1997 C.E. — an immense accumulation of plastic waste in the North Pacific Ocean, now one of several such gyres around the world. Plastic has been found at the summit of Mount Everest, in polar ice cores, and in the deepest ocean trenches.

Lasting impact

Bangladesh’s 2002 C.E. ban didn’t solve global plastic pollution. But it proved something crucial: a national government could act decisively on plastic, and the world wouldn’t end. Industry could adapt. People could adjust.

That proof of concept matters more than it might seem. Environmental bans are often met with predictions of economic catastrophe that rarely materialize. Bangladesh — a low-income country facing extreme climate vulnerability — showed that the calculus of waiting was worse than the calculus of acting.

The decision also established a precedent in international environmental law and policy. Each country that followed was, in some sense, citing Bangladesh. The United Nations Environment Assembly’s work on a global plastics treaty traces part of its political lineage to that first national ban.

Blindspots and limits

Bangladesh’s ban targeted thin bags specifically, and enforcement in a densely populated, under-resourced country has been difficult and uneven — particularly in rural areas and informal markets. The ban addressed a symptom of plastic pollution rather than its deeper driver: a global production and consumption system that treats disposable plastic as the default.

Progress on a binding international plastics treaty has also been slower than advocates hoped, with negotiations still ongoing as of the mid-2020s C.E.

Read more

For more on this story, see: United Nations Environment Programme

For more from Good News for Humankind, see:

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