Canada Bans Many Single-Use Plastics

Canada has enacted the Single-use Plastics Prohibition Regulations, SOR/2022-138, prohibiting the manufacture, import, export, and sale of many single-use plastics (SUPs).  The ban will cover the following six types of SUPs by the end of 2025:

  • Checkout bags;
  • Cutlery;
  • Foodservice ware containing expanded polystyrene foam, extruded polystyrene foam (commonly known by the trademark Styrofoam), polyvinyl chloride (PVC), carbon black, or an oxo-degradable plastic;
  • Ring carriers (defined as plastic items “formed in the shape of a series of deformable rings or bands that are designed to surround beverage containers in order to carry them together”);
  • Stir sticks; and
  • Straws.

For ring carriers, the prohibition on manufacture and import takes effect on June 20, 2023, and sale will be prohibited on June 20, 2024.  Manufacture and import of the other five types of SUPs will be prohibited on December 20, 2023, and sale of these items will be prohibited on December 20, 2023.

All six types of SUPs are subject to a temporary exemption for manufacture, import, and sale for the purpose of export; this exemption will be repealed on December 20, 2025.  In the meantime, the regulations institute recordkeeping requirements for persons who manufacture or import SUPs for the purpose of export.

Flexible SUP straws are not subject to the manufacture and import prohibitions for SUP straws, but alternative provisions apply.  For example, retail stores will only be allowed to sell flexible SUP straws if a customer requests straws and the straws are “not displayed in a manner that permits the customer to view the package without the help of a store employee.”

The regulations are the latest in a series of steps taken by Canada to move away from the use of SUPs.  In 2020, Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) released a report on the sources, environmental fate, occurrence, and health effects of plastic pollution, which concluded by stating that “action is needed to reduce macroplastics and microplastics that end up in the environment” in accordance with the precautionary principle.  In 2021, manufactured plastic items were added to the List of Toxic Substances in Schedule 1 to the Canadian Environmental Protection Act.

More information on the regulations can be found in an ECCC guidance document.