Seoul seeks to calm rush to buy rubbish bags over Mideast war

South Korean protesters attach stickers on a banner showing the Strait of Hormuz during a rally against the US and Israel attacks on Iran near the presidential office in Seoul, South Korea, Saturday, March 28, 2026. (AP)
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Updated 30 March 2026
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Seoul seeks to calm rush to buy rubbish bags over Mideast war

  • South Korea is a major importer of oil and related by-products used to make plastic and a vast array of other items

SEOUL: South Korea’s energy minister sought Monday to ease fears over shortages of plastic rubbish bags after sales in Seoul jumped nearly fivefold due to energy supply concerns sparked by the Middle East war.
South Korea is a major importer of oil and related by-products used to make plastic and a vast array of other items, and household trash can only be disposed of in special bags sold in shops.
The Seoul city government told AFP that daily sales of the bags surged nearly fivefold to 2.7 million last week, and major retailers have imposed limits on how many customers can buy.
“There is no need to worry about the supply of standard garbage bags,” Energy Minister Kim Sung-whan said on social media on Monday.
“There is ample capacity to use recycled raw materials, meaning there will be no supply issues for more than a year,” he said, adding that there would be no price hike.
Even under the worst-case scenario, the government would consider allowing general plastic bags to be used as waste bags, he said.
“You will never be in a situation where you are forced to store garbage at home.”
Most of South Korea’s oil imports pass through the Strait of Hormuz, which has been effectively shut by Iran since the United States and Israel began attacking the country on February 28.
This prompted the government of Asia’s fourth-largest economy to introduce caps on fuel prices — a first since 1997 — and prepare a “wartime” supplementary budget worth 25 trillion won ($16.5 billion).
Korean authorities have also urged people to save energy, including by taking shorter showers, walking or cycling more and charging mobile phones during daytime hours.