Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Walmart Canada Introduces Five Cent Charge For Plastic Bags

The Canadian Press, 25 Jan, 2016 12:58 PM
    TORONTO — Walmart Canada will begin to charge customers for plastic bags as part of its strategy for cutting the amount of plastic that ends up in landfills.
     
    Beginning on Feb. 9, customers will be charged five cents each for plastic bags, with reusable bags available for a discounted rate of 25 cents each.
     
    The company — headquartered in Mississauga, west of Toronto — said that the introduction of a small fee in other countries has helped Walmart to reduce the number of plastic bags by more than half.
     
    Walmart says some of the proceeds from the new charge will go toward supporting recycling initiatives for grocery bags and other thin plastic objects.
     
    The company said it's also going to improve in-store recycling and collection programs and work with suppliers to find ways of removing plastic from its packaging.
     
    Walmart Canada has 397 stores and serves more than 1.2 million customers per day.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Hudson's Bay Pairs Online Shopping Business Gilt With Its Saks Off 5th Stores

    Hudson's Bay Pairs Online Shopping Business Gilt With Its Saks Off 5th Stores
    Hudson's Bay Co. is scooping up Gilt Groupe Holdings Inc., one of the last independent e-commerce retailers built on the niche market of "flash sales."

    Hudson's Bay Pairs Online Shopping Business Gilt With Its Saks Off 5th Stores

    Apple's Tim Cook Got A Raise Of More Than $1 Million Last Year, Earning More Than $10 Million

    Apple's Tim Cook Got A Raise Of More Than $1 Million Last Year, Earning More Than $10 Million
    Apple CEO Tim Cook got a raise of more than $1 million last year, though he didn't make as much as his top lieutenants.

    Apple's Tim Cook Got A Raise Of More Than $1 Million Last Year, Earning More Than $10 Million

    Schools Threaten Students With Suspensions Over Outdated Immunization Records

    Schools Threaten Students With Suspensions Over Outdated Immunization Records
    Thousands of Ontario students face suspensions from school because they haven't provided updated immunization records, but public health officials can't say exactly how many young people across the province are affected.

    Schools Threaten Students With Suspensions Over Outdated Immunization Records

    On Thin Ice: Scientists Study Safety Of Skating On Urban Storm-Water Ponds

    On Thin Ice: Scientists Study Safety Of Skating On Urban Storm-Water Ponds
    Mark Loewen and his research team spent the last two winters hauling around a radar machine and drilling through ice as children and adults raced around on skates and fired slapshots.

    On Thin Ice: Scientists Study Safety Of Skating On Urban Storm-Water Ponds

    CRTC Launches New Code To Make Tv Service Bills Clearer For Customers

    CRTC Launches New Code To Make Tv Service Bills Clearer For Customers
    Canada's broadcast regulator has laid out details for a new industry code that cable and satellite companies will have to follow when they're billing customers.

    CRTC Launches New Code To Make Tv Service Bills Clearer For Customers

    Application Aims To Shed Light On Closed-door Hearings In B.C. Terror Trial

    A British Columbia Supreme Court judge is tasked with deciding how much the public should be allowed to know about the involvement of Canada's spy agency in a terrorism probe.

    Application Aims To Shed Light On Closed-door Hearings In B.C. Terror Trial