In the late 2010s, a movement towards laws banning or otherwise restricting the use of plastic straws and other single-use plastics emerged. Environmental groups have encouraged consumers to object to "forced" inclusion of plastic straws with food service. The movement followed the discovery of plastic particles in oceanic
garbage patches and larger plastic waste-reduction efforts that focused on banning
plastic bags in some jurisdictions. It has been intensified by
viral videos, including one of a plastic straw being removed from a sea turtle's nostril by biologist
Nathan J. Robinson and filmed by marine biologist and activist
Christine Figgener. "forcing restaurants, coffee shops, bars and the like, beach huts and hawkers of the municipality to use and provide to its customers only biodegradable and/or recyclable paper straws individually".
Canada In May 2018, the
Vancouver city council voted in favor of adopting a "Single Use Reduction Strategy", targeting single-use styrofoam containers and plastic straws. The council approved the first phase of the regulations in November 2019, expected to be in place by April 2020, barring the distribution of single-use straws unless requested (with straws on hand required to be bendable for accessibility reasons). Bubble tea shops will be given a one-year exemption. In March 2019,
Starbucks announced that they would be debuting strawless lids for cold drinks across
Toronto as a part of their global environmental aspirations. In June 2019, in the lead-up to the
federal election, prime minister
Justin Trudeau announced his intent to enact legislation restricting the use of petroleum-based single-used plastics as early as 2021. In 2023, the ban was overturned by the
Federal Court, as it was found to be "unreasonable and unconstitutional".
European Union In May 2018, the
European Union proposed a directive banning a number of single-use plastic items including straws, cotton buds, cutlery, balloon sticks and drink stirrers, in addition to limiting the use other single-use plastics and extending producer responsibility. The EU estimated the plan would avoid 3.4 million tons of
carbon emissions, save consumers €6.5 billion, and prevent environmental damage that would cost the equivalent of €22 billion by the year 2030. and the directive came into effect on 2 July 2021. The specificity of the European market is that it prohibits all types of straws made of plastic, whether bio-based or compostable. This means that popular straws made of PHA, PBS or PLA for example, are prohibited in this territory.
New Zealand Plastic straws and other single-use plastics were banned in New Zealand on 1 July 2023, with exceptions for disabled people. Plastic straws that are added to packaging by machines (such as juice boxes) will be banned on 1 January 2026.
Taiwan Single-use plastic straws banned in government facilities, schools, department stores, shopping malls and fast food restaurants from 1 July 2019.
United Kingdom The UK government committed at most £4 million to "Plastics innovation: towards zero waste" in the summer of 2017 in an attempt to mitigate the circulation of unnecessary plastic. In this endeavor, eleven projects secured the full amount in government support. On 19 April 2018, ahead of
Earth Day, a proposal to phase out single-use plastics was announced during the meeting of the
Commonwealth Heads of Government. It is estimated that as of 2018, about 23 million straws are used and discarded daily in the UK. In May 2019, England announced that it would ban single-use plastic straws, stirring sticks and
cotton buds in April 2020: only registered pharmacies will be allowed to sell straws to the public, and restaurants may only offer them by request of customers. The ban was delayed due to the
coronavirus pandemic and came into effect on 1 October 2020.
United States On February 10, 2025
President Donald Trump signed
Executive Order 14208 titled
Ending Procurement and Forced Use of Paper Straws aimed at encouraging the U.S. government and consumers to buy plastic drinking straws, pushing back efforts by
President Biden to phase them out. Additionally, Trump has called for an end to the "forced used of paper straws", blaming the Biden administration for pre-existing policy which "wasted American taxpayer dollars on virtue signaling instead of implementing effective solutions."
California On 7 November 2017, the city of
Santa Cruz, California, implemented a ban on all non-recyclable to-go containers, straws, and lids but allowed for 6 months for all businesses to come into compliance before enforcement would occur. On 1 January 2018, the city of
Alameda, California, citing the Santa Cruz effort, implemented an immediate ban on all straws, except if requested by a customer, and gave business until 1 July 2018, when it would be required that all straws to be of compostable paper and that all other to-go containers be recyclable. A statewide
California law restricting the providing of single-use plastic straws went into effect on 1 January 2019. Under the law, restaurants are only allowed to provide single-use plastic straws upon request. The law applies to sit-down restaurants but exempts fast-food restaurants, delis, coffee shops, and restaurants that do takeout only. The law does not apply to-go cups and takeaway drinks. A restaurant will receive warnings for its first two violations, then a $25 per day fine for each subsequent violation, up to a maximum of $300 in a year. In a statement released upon his signing the legislation into law, then-Governor
Jerry Brown said "It is a very small step to make a customer who wants a plastic straw ask for it. And it might make them pause and think again about an alternative. But one thing is clear, we must find ways to reduce and eventually eliminate single-use plastic products." Local regulations have also been passed in
Malibu,
Davis and
San Luis Obispo, California.
Hawaii County enacted a ban which additionally requires that all plastic-alternatives be
compostable.
Florida Local regulations have been passed in
Miami Beach and
Fort Myers, Florida.
Massachusetts In 2015,
Williamstown, Massachusetts, banned straws that are not recyclable or compostable as part of its Article 42 polystyrene regulations. In the first half of 2018, three towns in Massachusetts banned petrochemical plastic straws directly in the case of
Provincetown, and as part of broader
sustainable food packaging laws in
Andover and
Brookline. In 2019,
Longmeadow, Massachusetts, banned plastic straws and polystyrene packaging.
New York A drinking straw ban has been proposed in
New York City since May 2018. Businesses are fined if a straw is provided (unless requested) and also fined if no plastic straws are available and also fined for other reasons regarding straws.
Washington state The city of
Seattle implemented a ban on non-compostable disposable straws on 1 July 2018.
Voluntary conversions After consideration of a ban in the UK, in 2018, after a two-month trial of paper straws at a number of outlets in the UK,
McDonald's announced they would be switching to paper straws for all locations in the United Kingdom and Ireland. and testing the switch in U.S. locations in June 2018. A month after the Vancouver ban passed (but before it took effect) Canada's second-largest fast food chain,
A&W announced they would have plastic straws fully phased out by January 2019 in all of their locations. Various independent restaurants have also stopped using plastic straws.
Starbucks announced conversion by 2020 to no-straw lids for all cold drinks except for
frappucinos, which will be served with straws made from paper or other sustainable materials.
Hyatt Hotels announced straws would be provided by request only, starting 1 September 2018.
Royal Caribbean plans to offer only paper straws on request by 2019, and
IKEA said it would eliminate all single-use plastic items by 2020. Other conversions include
Waitrose, and
Burger King UK stores starting September 2018. A few other cruise lines, air lines, beverage companies, and hotels, have also made partial or complete reductions, but most companies in those industries have not, as of May 2018. Full bans on single-use plastic straws have faced opposition from
disability rights advocates, as they feel that alternative materials are not well-suited for use by those with impaired mobility (caused by conditions such as
cerebral palsy and
spinal muscular atrophy). Some with neuromuscular disabilities may rely on a plastic straw for its heat resistance and due to an inability to lift a cup. The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) has required public places to provide plastic straws in order to ensure that those who need them will be able to access them. In particular, not all people with disabilities may be capable of washing reusable straws, straws made from inflexible materials are not capable of being repositioned, paper straws lose their firmness over time when soaked in a beverage, and straws made from hard materials such as metal can cause injuries. Advocates have preferred laws that still allow plastic straws to be offered upon request. The
American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC)—a U.S.
conservative lobbying group against "excessive" regulation—has promoted
model state bills which contain carve-outs for
fast food and
fast casual restaurants from straw bans (in effect only restricting "sit-down" restaurants), and restrict municipalities from preempting the rule with a stricter regulation (with the draft law text stating that the latter leads to "confusing and varying regulations that could lead to unnecessary increased costs for retail and food establishments to comply with such regulations"). In 2019, the
re-election campaign of U.S.,
Republican Party president
Donald Trump marketed packages of reusable plastic straws branded with Trump's name and colored in the signature red associated with the "
Make America Great Again" slogan, as a fundraising stunt. The campaign website promoted them as an alternative to "
liberal paper straws". ==In fiction==