Environmentalists gathered at the entrance of the Breeze Center in Taipei yesterday morning, criticizing the shopping mall over its handling of the sale of Anya Hindmarch's eco-friendly bags last Friday.
Ho Tsung-hsun (
"Given that hundreds of customers have already lined up in front of the store the night before the sale, the company should have marked a clear route for the line to move smoothly and peacefully," he said. "Their marketing strategy is definitely eco-unfriendly."
PHOTO: WANG MIN-WEI, TAIPEI TIMES
Ho also said that the company could have done better than simply tell the public that "It's Not a Plastic Bag" -- the slogan printed on the front of the Anya Hindmarch bags.
He said that consumers have no way of telling how the bag was made, or whether the manufacturing process was as eco-friendly as it claimed.
Carrying dozens of plain, eco-friendly shopping bags with them, Ho and representatives from other nongovernmental organizations demanded a chance to speak with the fashion company's agents in Taiwan, but they were stopped at the entrance by the mall's security guards.
Yesterday's protest was but a reflection of the growing dissatisfaction among environmentalists over the issue of protecting the environment.
For Sandra Peng (
"I was speechless when I saw people fighting for the eco-friendly shopping bags on TV," she told the Taipei Times. "I was thinking -- `Well, if only the same number of enthusiasts were committed to protecting the environment.'"
While Peng agreed that the public should be informed about the urgent need for environmental protection, she noted the fundamental conflict that exists between encouraging consumption and preserving the environment.
"I really doubt that anyone bought the bag for the sake of protecting the Earth," she said, adding that she was aware that some bought the bags in hopes of selling them later at a higher price.
The fact that anyone would spend NT$500 to show that he or she is an eco-friendly shopper is something Lim Hak-yan (
"Do you know how many eco-friendly shopping bags I have in my house? More than 20," he said, adding that they were all given free under various occasions.
Lim said his shopping bags were made from various materials -- from used plastic bottles to other biodegradable substance.
"To be honest, I think it [the sale] was all part of a marketing strategy to encourage buying," he said. "It had nothing to do with environmental protection."
Like Ho, Lim also questioned if the company had informed consumers how the bag was produced and whether a portion of the revenue generated from the bag's sales would be used to sponsor other environmental protection campaigns.
Eight buyers were injured while struggling to get one of the bags.
The bags are available in limited quantities worldwide. Less than 1,000 were appropriated for sales in Taiwan last Friday.
On the same day, chaos also marred sales of the bags in Hong Kong. News reports showed that although the stores had informed the waiting customers that all bags had been sold, many refused to leave and vowed to stay in line until they got one.
Controversies have dogged the bag since it was first released in Britain. A BBC News broadcast on March 14 showed "We Are What We Do," an activist group that coordinated with the company in the campaign to encourage the reuse of shopping bags, was upset to find the product selling for ?175 (US$351) on eBay. The bag originally retailed at ?5.
A statement at the official Web site of Anya Hindmarch stated that the company wanted to use its influence to "make it fashionable not to use plastic bags."
"This bag [I'm Not A Plastic Bag] is a stylish, practical reusable alternative that we hoped would raise awareness of wasted packaging and spark debate," it said.
The statement further claimed that the bag was made in China, adding that its supplier there paid its workers twice the minimum wage and complied fully with Chinese labor laws.
The statement added that carbon emitted during the production and freight is offset by the carbon credits it has purchased, but did not provide details on how much carbon was actually produced during the manufacturing process.
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