Plastic coffee cups tamped out in nation-first ban

Single-use, non-compostable coffee cups are now banned in WA but compostable cups are still allowed. (Diego Fedele/AAP PHOTOS)

Hundreds of millions of coffee cups are expected to be saved from landfill as the nation's first ban on plastic-lined takeaway cups takes effect.

Western Australia became the first state to introduce the ban on single-use, non-compostable coffee cups on Friday, with businesses who fail to comply threatened with hefty fines.

Instead, cafes can use compostable paperboard cups, which are excluded from the ban, or encourage customers to bring keep cups of their own, said WA Environment Minister Reece Whitby.

"This is an excellent move for the environment because we know that plastic persists in the environment for decades and decades and decades," he told reporters on Saturday.

The change is part of a wider push by the Cook government to reduce the prevalence of single-use plastics in the economy.

Also banned on Friday were unlidded disposable plastic food trays, such as sushi trays and bento boxes. 

Bans on several items, including microbeads and cotton bud sticks, came into effect in 2023, while sales of plastic produce bags and takeaway containers with lids will be prohibited from September.

Mr Whitby said more than a billion single-use plastic items, including more than 154 million coffee cups, will be saved from landfill annually.

Friday's change came after a 12-month consultation process with businesses, which the government says are broadly supportive of the changes and already use environmentally friendly alternatives to single-use plastics.

It hopes to keep the community onside by easing the bans in with a "common-sense" approach to enforcement.

"It's all about education," Mr Whitby said. 

"We're allowing cafes that might have old stocks of compostable coffee cups to trade them out."

But authorities also carry a big stick to dissuade those who continually flout the restrictions, with fines of up to $5000 on offer for individuals or $25,000 for businesses.

The latest bans come just in time for Clean Up Australia Day on Sunday, which has spurred scores of volunteers to remove plastic coffee cups from parks and waterways since 1990.

During the 2023 financial year, the group's volunteers cleaned up almost 13,000 takeaway coffee cups, lifting them into the top 10 most common items of rubbish found.

Increased social activity in the aftermath of COVID-19 likely contributed to the rise in coffee cup waste, Clean Up Australia Day said in its annual Litter Report.

While South Australia has committed to removing the cups from sale in September, progress is slower in the more populous states, with NSW and Victoria among the jurisdictions yet to commit to a ban.

"Western Australia is ahead of the pack," Mr Whitby crowed. 

"We are the leading state in transitioning away from single-used plastics."

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