Refleksi : Saya pernah berdiam di Onjuku. Tempat ini kalau naik kereta api dari 
Tokyo  memakan waktu 3 jam. Onjuku diberi nama julukan Costa de la Luna [Pantai 
'Terang' Bulan]. Saya bisa berdiam di tempat ini, karena seorang teman Jepang 
mempunyai apartmen dan tidak didiami, hanya kadang-kadang saja waktu liburan. 
Ini tempat touris. 

Menurut taksiran saya panjang pantai Kutai, kurrang lebih sama panjangnya 
dengan pantai Onjuku. Di pantainya ada patung Maria dan Joseph naik unta, 
padahal tidak ada gereja di Onjuku maupun di kampun-kampung yang berdekatan.
  
Tetapi, yang penting ialah bagaimana orang Jepang menjaga kebersihan pantai,  
pasir di pantai Onjuku ditapis dari puntung-puntung rokok atau benda-benda 
kecil lainya. Tidak ada plastik atau sampah seperti yang dapat dilihat di 
pantai di Bali. 

Kalau di Turki misalnya di Alanya, pagi-pagi buta orang sudah kerja 
membersihkan pantai dari rumput laut. Plastik itu tidak dijumpai. Ditaruh 
pengumuman dalam bahasa Turki, "Bawalah sampah ke rumahmu". 

Satu negeri termasuk paling  miskin tetapi bersih ialah Eritrea, orang disana 
tidak membuang sampah sembarang.

http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/lifeandtimes/plastic-bag-habit-trashed/363777

March 14, 2010 
Jen Davis

 
Kuta, and other Bali beaches are among the island's assets polluted by plastic. 
(JG Photo)

Plastic-Bag Habit Trashed
In Indonesia and abroad, there is less and less tolerance to the smell of 
burning plastic, the toxic residue it produces and the mountains of plastic 
trash on roads, in waterways and on reefs and ocean floors. Jakarta Governor 
Fauzi Bowo has set a goal to eliminate the use of plastic bags in his city 
within the next 12 months, with a range of measures including incentives and 
possible sanctions for retailers. 

In Bali, the tourism-driven economy has helped focus attention on the ugly 
impact of pollution, yet the little island's 3.5 million inhabitants still 
produce about 5,000 tons of garbage per day. Most of this is organic, but 
Bali's plastic waste alone is estimated to be between 600 and 750 tons, or 167 
large truckloads a day. 

Recently, collaboration between the Bali outlet of a Indonesian retail giant 
Hypermart and a local environmental group has provided one simple, 
comprehensive model for other retailers and their customers to follow. 

HyperGreen, a practical initiative designed to raise awareness about the 
environment and reduce plastic waste, includes point-of-purchase information, 
posters and inexpensive, reusable cloth bags offered for sale to customers. 
Staff training and regular announcements are also part of the program designed 
by the Bali Cantik Tanpa Plastik Campaign (SNTP), or Say No to Plastic, for 
Hypermart's Kuta Galleria Mall outlet. 

This Hypermart is part of the massive Matahari group, Indonesia's 
second-largest retailer, with more than 80 Matahari department stores, 40 
Hypermarts and 265 Foodmarts around Indonesia, so a lot of eyes are on the 
campaign. 

SNTP is not an official organization, just a determined group of individuals 
from around the world who love Bali and wanted to get involved in cleaning up 
the island. The campaign team - six Indonesians including four Balinese, two 
Australians, an American and a German - have had experience working on other 
national and international environment and social-change campaigns. 

Their aim is simple: to reduce single-use plastic bags and educate the public 
on the environmental impacts of plastic. 

According to SNTP spokeswoman Alex Ryan, in the campaign's first month, 
HyperGreen saw a 50 percent reduction in the volume of plastic bags used by 
Hypermart. "That's around one ton of plastic that did not enter landfill. A 
success already," she said. 

For customers who want to help, inexpensive cloth bags with the slogan "I'm 
HyperGreen, I bring my own bag!" are available at Hypermart. 

"So far, bringing your own bag that can be reused again and again is the most 
effective and practical way that an individual can help reduce plastic bag use 
and the negative impacts of plastic waste on the environment," Ryan said. 

"SNTP encourages a levy on plastic bags to discourage consumers from using 
plastic bags, as well as incentive programs that reward those who refuse 
plastic and bring their own bags. We also work with communities on 
plastic-waste reduction and prevention." 

Ni Nyoman Erawati, the general manager of Hypermart at Kuta Galleria, said SNTP 
helped management and staff realize that one of the main sources of the plastic 
waste all over the island was the plastic shopping bags they offered customers 
every day. 

"Most of these bags end up in open landfill, waterways, canals, rivers, 
gardens, rice fields and the sea," Ni said. 

After calculating that 4,300 plastic bags distributed daily to customers cost 
the store more than Rp 190 million ($20,710) per year, the Hypermart Bali store 
realized the financial incentive in reducing that number. 

The goal of the HyperGreen campaign is to change people's behavior. Hypermart 
encourages shoppers to bring their own bags wherever they shop - not just to 
the retailer - and to refuse single-use plastic bags wherever they go. In 
Hypermart, smart reminder tags and signs at each checkout ask customers if they 
have remembered to bring their bag. Trained checkout staff talk to customers 
about why they shouldn't use plastic while their purchases are packed. 

HyperGreen will run for at least six months and be integrated into many of the 
Kuta store's activities. There are animations displayed on large-screen TVs on 
sale within the store, field trips by Hypermart checkout staff to clean up 
illegal trash dumps in Bali wetlands, and a poster campaign featuring customers 
using HyperGreen bags. 

Creative advertising specialist and campaign team member Noviana Kusumawardhani 
said Hypermart was making the most of the opportunity. 

"The SNTP process of creating this campaign is based on sound strategic 
thinking. They've put it together methodically and with great creativity," 
Noviana said. 

Meanwhile, SNTP is urging the business sector to become more active in 
environmental causes. 

Antipollution legislation is relatively weak in Indonesia as opposed to abroad. 
Handing out disposable plastic bags is now banned or taxed in more than 40 
countries around the world, including Bangladesh, China, Hong Kong, Ireland and 
Taiwan. 

"The idea of introducing a 'user pays' system for plastic bags is not a new 
one, and it is a proven and effective system that really works, as opposed to a 
ban, which has dubious benefits," Ryan said. 

"The idea is not to tax the poor, but more to generate consumer awareness and 
then responsibility over our consumption habits." 

Replacing an environmentally unfriendly single-use plastic bag with a 
biodegradable one, however, will not transform consumer habits. A biodegradable 
bag still ends up in landfill where, despite the myth, it will not decompose 
because it is compressed with other trash. 

Other leading retailers, such as Bali's Hardy's Group, are already seeking 
guidance from SNTP. In January, Hardy's invited group representatives to brief 
a business gathering of all their major suppliers on the campaign and the 
impact of plastic on the environment. Bali TV and Heartline Radio Station 92.2 
will both broadcast SNTP community service announcements in the coming weeks.


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