Tel Aviv - Israelis will soon have to pay 10 agorot - approximately 3 cents - for plastic shopping bags according to a law passed in the Knesset overnight Monday.

The law applies to large supermarket chains which will be prohibited from distributing the bags free of charge.

It is estimated that Israeli consumers use over 2.2 billion plastic bags each year.

Environmental Protection Minister Avi Gabbay lauded the legislation as an important step to protect the environment. 

“I am happy that we succeeded in getting this law passed after years of debate,” Gabbay said on Tuesday.

The law passed almost two years after former environmental protection minister Amir Peretz first introduced the initiative.

The bill Peretz initially proposed in 2014 would have charged 60 agorot per bag and provided a free reusable bag to consumers. A later version of the bill, which would have charged 30 agorot per bag, was approved by the Knesset plenary in the first reading on October 2014, but eventually was shelved when the government fell apart. It was later resurrected after the formation of the current government.

The ministry estimates that large supermarket chains spend NIS 88 million annually on plastic bags and tack the cost onto the price of products.

In the coming year, the ministry is expected to decide on targets with which to measure if the law is successful.

Before the bill was passed some were worried that the law did not go far enough.

Ronen Bodoni, who heads Environmental NGO Zalul, said on Monday that a plastic bag law needs to be “brave and uncompromising” in order to seriously convince consumers to use less bags. He said that “the public will stay apathetic” after the passage of the the proposed bill.

Meanwhile MK Yael Cohen Paran said that the law should have been similar to previous proposals to charge a 40-agorot fee and give consumers a free, reusable bag. Still, she praised the “positive change” for Israel’s environment.

When the current version of the bill was formulated in February, Zalul’s CEO, Maya Jacobs, told The Jerusalem Post that the law would have to charge at least 30-agorot per bag and would need to involve smaller stores as well for it to be effective.