Bill Text: HI HB2536 | 2024 | Regular Session | Amended
Bill Title: Relating To Single-use Plastics.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 8-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2024-02-07 - Passed Second Reading as amended in HD 1 and referred to the committee(s) on CPC with Representative(s) Matsumoto voting aye with reservations; Representative(s) Alcos, Garcia voting no (2) and Representative(s) Nakashima, Ward excused (2). [HB2536 Detail]
Download: Hawaii-2024-HB2536-Amended.html
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES |
H.B. NO. |
2536 |
THIRTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2024 |
H.D. 1 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
RELATING TO SINGLE-USE PLASTICS.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION
1. The legislature finds that the local and global impact of the
world's increasing waste stream is unsustainable and detrimental to the future
of Hawaii's economy, the environmental integrity of our islands, and the health
of the people. There has been an
exponential rise in single-use food ware items over the past few decades
globally, with particularly high increases in plastics and bioplastics. Single-use disposable food ware items,
including cups, lids, and single-use food containers, are major contributors to
street and beach litter, ocean pollution, and marine and other wildlife harm.
A significant portion of marine debris,
estimated to be eighty per cent, originates on land, primarily as escaped
refuse and litter, much of it plastic, via urban runoff. It is now estimated that 8.75 million metric
tons of plastic enter our ocean each year from land-based sources.
These land-based plastics degrade into
pieces and particles of all sizes, including microplastics, and are present in
the world's oceans at all trophic levels.
Among other hazards, plastic debris attract and concentrate ambient
pollutants like heavy metals and persistent organic pollutants in seawater and
freshwater, which can transfer to fish and other seafood that are eventually
caught and sold for human consumption.
The need for significant change in Hawaii
was underscored in 2020, when the United States Environmental Protection Agency
found that several of the State's beaches are impaired by trash, with the
majority of the pollutants composed of single-use plastics. Although countries, states, and cities around
the world have banned some single-use plastics, the plastic pollution problem
persists with the rise of certain bioplastics.
Not all bioplastics are designed to degrade
completely or quickly in the natural environment. While bio-based plastics like polylactic acid
and conventional plastics with enhanced degradation are commonly touted as
sustainable alternatives to conventional plastics, these products will often
only break down and meet compostable requirements when sent to an industrial
composting facility.
Like
conventional plastics, bioplastics are produced in facilities that drive
pollution and are likely to end up in landfills and incinerators. Industrial facilities, including those
producing bioplastics, are likely to be developed in underserved communities,
as are most forms of waste infrastructure.
These sites emit dangerous pollutants, reduce overall quality of life,
and pose a heightened risk of industrial accidents like fires and explosions.
The legislature also finds that cleaning up
plastic presents a significant cost to Hawaii taxpayers. The cost of increasing cleanups by government
agencies, businesses, and the general public is rising to account for expensive
management and mitigation practices. A
study of over ninety counties in California concluded that taxpayers are paying
$428,000,000 per year to clean up plastic through storm drain management,
street sweeping, and marine cleanups.
San Diego county, which has an equivalent population to Hawaii at
1,300,000 people, spends $14,000,000 annually cleaning up plastic.
Alternatives to bioplastics already exist
for many take-out items. Zero waste
plastic reduction plans are moving forward all over the world, including within
the European Union, Ethiopia, Costa Rica, and municipalities across the United
States.
The purpose of this Act is to phase in a prohibition on the
purchase, use, sale, and distribution of disposable or single-use
non-compostable plastic food ware and beverage service items by various
entities.
SECTION
2. Chapter 342H, Hawaii Revised
Statutes, is amended by adding a new section to be appropriately designated and
to read as follows:
"§342H- Single-use plastic food ware
and beverage service items; prohibited. (a)
No business where food or beverages that are packaged and sold on the
business' premises for individual consumption shall use, sell, or distribute
disposable or single-use plastic food ware, beverage cups, lids, or other food
containers after January 1, 2025.
(b)
The prohibitions in subsection (a) shall not apply to the following:
(1) Reusable,
refillable containers;
(2) Compostable
plastics; provided that:
(A) There is regional access to a collection program for those
plastics; and
(B) A local facility actively accepts, manages, and processes the
plastics; and
(3) Packaging
in any situation deemed by a county to be an emergency requiring immediate
action for the preservation of life, health, property, safety, or essential
public services. This exemption shall be
in place until the emergency has ceased or the governor has determined that the
exemption is no longer applicable to the situation.
(c)
For purposes of this section:
"Business" means any
commercial enterprise or establishment operating in the State, including an
individual proprietorship, joint venture, partnership, corporation, limited
liability company, or other legal entity, whether for profit or not for profit,
and includes all employees of the business or any independent contractors
associated with the business.
"Compostable plastics" means
products that have been certified by an independent third-party organization to
meet ASTM standards D6400 and D6868.
"Disposable" means designed to
be discarded after a single or limited number of uses and not designed or
manufactured for long-term reuse.
"Plastic":
(1) Means
a synthetic or semisynthetic material chemically synthesized by the
polymerization of organic substances that can be shaped into various rigid and
flexible forms;
(2) Includes,
without limitation, polyethylene terephthalate, high density polyethylene,
polyvinyl chloride, low density polyethylene, polypropylene, polystyrene,
polylactic acid, and aliphatic biopolyesters, such as polyhydroxyalkanoate and
polyhydroxybutyrate; and
(3) Does not include natural rubber, aluminum, glass, paper, bamboo,
sugarcane, coconut husk, cassava, polymers such as proteins or starches or
other biomass, or reusable containers.
"Plastic food ware" means hot
and cold beverage cups, cup lids, plates, bowls, bowl lids,
"clamshells", trays, or other hinged or lidded containers that
contain plastic.
"Prepared food" means food or
beverages that are prepared to be consumed on or off the premises of a
restaurant or food establishment.
"Reusable", "refillable",
"reuse", or "refill", in regard to packaging or food
service ware, means:
(1) For
packaging or food service ware that is reused or refilled by a producer:
(A) Explicitly designed and marketed to be utilized multiple times
for the same product, or for another purposeful packaging use in a supply
chain;
(B) Designed for durability to function properly in its original
condition for multiple uses;
(C) Supported by adequate infrastructure to ensure the packaging or
food service ware can be conveniently and safely reused or refilled for
multiple cycles; and
(D) Repeatedly recovered, inspected, and repaired, if necessary, and
reissued into the supply chain for reuse or refill for multiple cycles; or
(2) For
packaging or food service ware that is reused or refilled by a consumer:
(A) Explicitly designed and marketed to be utilized multiple times
for the same product;
(B) Designed for durability to function properly in its original
condition for multiple uses; and
(C) Supported by adequate and convenient availability of and retail
infrastructure for bulk or large format packaging that may be refilled to
ensure the packaging or food service ware can be conveniently and safely reused
or refilled by the consumer multiple times.
"Single-use" means
conventionally disposed of after a single use or not sufficiently durable or
washable to be, or not intended to be, reusable or refillable."
SECTION 3. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 4. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 3000.
Report Title:
Disposable and Single-use Plastic Food Ware and Beverage Service Items; Prohibition; Solid Waste; Compostable Plastics
Description:
Prohibits businesses where food or beverages are packaged and sold on the business' premises for individual consumption from using, selling, or distributing certain disposable or single-use food ware and beverage service items after 1/1/2025. Effective 7/1/3000. (HD1)
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.