Today’s Solutions: July 11, 2026

Like most other countries around the world, Canada has a toxic relationship with single-use plastic. It is estimated that Canadian households generate more than 3 million tons of plastic waste every year, only 9 percent of which gets recycled — while the rest ends up in landfills and polluting the environment. But starting next year, Canadians are expected to say goodbye to disposable plastic items.

Checkout bags, straws, stir sticks, six-pack rings, and take-out containers will all become a thing of the past for Canadians, thanks to a nationwide ban that will take effect by the end of 2021. The move is part of a larger national plan to achieve a circular system for plastics by 2030.

“Plastic pollution threatens our natural environment. It fills our rivers and lakes, and most particularly our oceans, choking the wildlife that lives there,” Canadian Environment Minister Jonathan Wilkinson recently announced. “Canadians see the impact that pollution has from coast to coast to coast.”

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Nigerian school accepts plastic bottles as payment for tuition fees

A school in Nigeria is taking an innovative approach to tackle the problem of plastic waste while also promoting education. The Morit International School, ...

Read More

MPs vote to decriminalize abortion in England and Wales in historic victory f...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM British lawmakers have voted to decriminalize abortion, ending the threat of prosecution for women who terminate pregnancies outside ...

Read More

How Hope Hydration turns advertising dollars into free, clean drinking water

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM In a world where advertising saturates nearly every surface, from billboards and buses to our scrolling thumbs, one ...

Read More

Europe approves twice-yearly HIV prevention shot amid rising cases

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Imagine replacing a daily pill with just two injections a year. That is now a reality in Europe, ...

Read More