
Bali bans small plastic bottles to tackle waste crisis and microplastics: ‘urgent matter'
A sweeping new ban on small plastic water bottles in Bali has triggered backlash from
Indonesia 's beverage and plastics industries, even as environmental advocates hail it as a bold step toward tackling the island's growing waste crisis and microplastic contamination.
Governor I Wayan Koster, who launched the Bali Clean Waste Movement last month, has framed the initiative as part of a broader campaign to make the island of 4.3 million people waste-free by 2027. The policy builds on a 2018 gubernatorial decree that banned plastic bags in supermarkets and restaurants – a move since adopted by cities like Jakarta.
The new regulation, the first of its kind in Indonesia, which took effect in April, prohibits the production, distribution and sale of
single-use plastic water bottles smaller than one litre. It also mandates waste segregation at the source across government offices, private businesses, markets, schools and places of worship.
Speaking to reporters on April 6, Koster said that beverage producers should use glass bottles instead of plastic for their products.
Bali Governor I Wayan Koster launched the Bali Clean Waste Movement last month. Photo: Handout
He warned that villages failing to comply risk losing financial help and incentives, while errant businesses could face permit revocations and be publicly labelled 'not environmentally friendly' on the provincial government's social media channels.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
an hour ago
- South China Morning Post
Manulife's Hong Kong unit to redomicile from Bermuda thanks to new law
Manulife (International), the biggest pension provider in the city, plans to redomicile to Hong Kong from Bermuda in November, indicating its confidence in the city as an international financial centre, according to a notice it sent to customers on Friday. Advertisement This makes Manulife (International), the Hong Kong and Macau unit of Toronto-headquartered Manulife Financial, the second insurer to incorporate in Hong Kong after a new 'game changer' law easing the redomiciliation process came into effect on May 23. Rival AXA announced a similar move soon after the change. The legislation allows companies to establish themselves in the city while retaining their legal identity and business continuity. Previously, a redomiciling company had to wind up its existing entity and shift all assets and transactions to Hong Kong. Manulife said in a customer notice that its decision reflected confidence in Hong Kong as a premier international financial hub. 'Redomiciling to Hong Kong allows us to better align with the city's robust financial and regulatory environment, strengthening our ability to meet local market needs,' said Patrick Graham, CEO of Manulife Hong Kong and Macau. Advertisement The decision came shortly after Secretary for Financial Services and the Treasury Christopher Hui Ching-yu conducted a roadshow to several Canadian cities last week to promote Hong Kong, including the new regulatory regime. The simplified process would attract more local insurers and other companies incorporated in Bermuda or other tax havens to redomicile to Hong Kong, said Karina Wong, Greater China divisional president of CPA Australia, an accounting industry body.


South China Morning Post
an hour ago
- South China Morning Post
Tough times for Japan's curry shops as surging rice prices fuel bankruptcies
A record number of curry shops in Japan went out of business in the past year, as purveyors of one of the country's most beloved dishes took a hit from soaring rice prices Thirteen curry shops with more than 10 million yen (US$70,000) in debt filed for bankruptcy in the year ending in March – marking a record high for the second consecutive year, according to a report from Tokyo-based research firm Teikoku Databank. The total number of bankruptcies is likely much higher when considering smaller family-run shops, Teikoku said. Prices of mainstay ingredients in Japanese curry – such as rice, spices, meat and vegetables – have gone up due to a rice shortage, adverse weather and a weak yen, the report said. Higher energy prices have also dented the profits of shop operators. Japanese curry, a thick brown sauce containing meat and vegetables, is usually served on a bed of rice. A basic curry rice dish, a classic comfort food, now costs 365 yen (US$2.50) – a record high, according to Teikoku. Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's government has been scrambling to combat skyrocketing rice prices in Japan by releasing stockpiles of the staple ahead of a summer election. 01:24 Japanese shoppers scramble for cheap government-issued rice amid shortage crisis Japanese shoppers scramble for cheap government-issued rice amid shortage crisis During the coronavirus pandemic, takeaway and delivery orders had fuelled a curry boom – that has now also slowed and hurt sales for curry shops, Teikoku said.


South China Morning Post
an hour ago
- South China Morning Post
Alibaba unveils new open-source AI embedding models, a field it leads globally
Alibaba Group Holding has made its Qwen3 Embedding series available for developers, in the Chinese tech giant's latest bid to solidify its global leadership in open-source artificial intelligence (AI) models. Advertisement Released late on Thursday, the series marks another addition to the company's line-up of large language models (LLMs), which are among the world's most popular open-source AI systems , according to New York-based computer app company Hugging Face. Alibaba, owner of the South China Morning Post, ranks third globally in the field of LLMs, according to the 2025 AI Index Report from Stanford University. The new models, which come in various parameters, 'support over 100 languages, including multiple programming languages, and provide robust multilingual, cross-lingual and code retrieval capabilities', according to Alibaba. 11:13 How is betting on AI to transform e-commerce How is betting on AI to transform e-commerce In AI, an embedding model helps computers understand and process text by turning it into numerical representations. Since computers process data solely in numerical form, the embedding process enables them to grasp semantic data and questions more effectively, delivering more tailored results that do not rely solely on keywords.