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April 13, 2010 By Jen 6 Comments

Plastic Bag Bans: Will we just use more paper?

EarthTalk® 
From the Editors of E/The Environmental Magazine

Dear EarthTalk: How effective have plastic bag bans and restrictions been on reducing plastic litter and other problems associated with their proliferation? And is it really better to use paper bags, which will just lead to more deforestation? — Peter Lindsey, New Canaan, CT

Plastic bags, first introduced in the 1950s as a convenient way to store food, have since developed into a global scourge, littering roadsides, clogging sewer drains and landfills and getting ingested by animals and marine life. And in recent years we’ve discovered how they are so prolific that they now comprise a significant portion of the plastic and other garbage that has collected in huge ocean gyres far from land.

A few countries around the world—Bangladesh, China, India, Australia, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Israel, South Africa, Taiwan and Mumbai, among others—have taken stands against plastic bags through taxing their usage or banning them outright. The environmental think tank, Worldwatch Institute, reports that China’s decision to ban free plastic bags in 2008 has cut demand by some 40 billion bags, reduced plastic bag usage there by 66 percent, and saved some 1.6 million tons of petroleum.

In March 2007, San Francisco became the first (and is still the only) major U.S. city to implement an across-the-board ban on plastic bags. Large supermarkets and pharmacies there had to ditch plastic shopping bags by early 2008 in favor of paper bags or those made from all-natural biodegradable cornstarch-based plastic. Environmentalists are particularly fond of the latter option for those who don’t bring their own grocery bags, as these cornstarch bags offer the biodegradability of paper without the deforestation as well as the convenience of plastic without the damage to ecosystems. San Francisco officials had originally tried to work with retailers on reducing plastic bag use voluntarily. But after a few years of little or no cooperation, they decided to just institute the ban on anything but biodegradable bags. The result has been a 50 percent drop in plastic bag litter on the streets since the ban took effect.

Los Angeles followed suit and its city council voted in 2008 to ban plastic bags beginning in July 2010—but the ban will only take effect if the state of California doesn’t follow through on a statewide plan to impose a fee on shoppers who request plastic bags. City council members in L.A. hope the ban will spur consumers to carry their own reusable bags and thus reduce the amount of plastic washing into the city’s storm drains and into the Pacific Ocean. Several other U.S. cities, including New York, Philadelphia and Baltimore, have considered outright bans like San Francisco’s, but each settled instead on plastic bag recycling programs in the face of pressure from the plastics industry and retail commercial interests.

While increased demand for paper bags in the wake of plastic bag bans could lead to more deforestation, most paper grocery bags in use today are made from recycled content, not virgin wood. Also, an added benefit of paper over petroleum-based plastic is its biodegradability.Americans go through some 92 billion disposable plastic bags each year, and only five billion paper ones. If the nation banned plastic bags it is likely that paper varieties would only make up a small part of the difference, in light of the proliferation of reusable canvas shopping bags as well as the availability of biodegradable cornstarch plastic.

CONTACT: Worldwatch Institute, www.worldwatch.org.

SEND YOUR ENVIRONMENTAL QUESTIONS TO: EarthTalk®, c/o E – The Environmental Magazine, P.O. Box 5098, Westport, CT 06881; earthtalk@emagazine.com. E is a nonprofit publication. Subscribe: www.emagazine.com/subscribe; Request a Free Trial Issue: www.emagazine.com/trial.

Related

Filed Under: Earth Day, Random Green Tagged With: biodegradability, environment, environmental magazine, grocery bags, paper, paper bags, plastic bags, recycling, reusable bags, shopping bags

About Jen

Jennifer Smith provides Green Virtual Assistant Services to grow small businesses paperless and sustainable providing various e-services. Her passion is customizing StudioPress Themes for WordPress for her awesome clients. View her portfolio here.

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Comments

  1. Tracy says

    April 23, 2010 at 7:21 pm

    We do need to ban plastic, but I am afraid we will just end up using more paper.
    Though there has been a store in my area for 20 years that does not supply bags. Customers bring their own or the store will put your things in the boxes that would otherwise be thrown out. It has been able to make this work.

  2. Tracy says

    April 23, 2010 at 7:21 pm

    We do need to ban plastic, but I am afraid we will just end up using more paper.
    Though there has been a store in my area for 20 years that does not supply bags. Customers bring their own or the store will put your things in the boxes that would otherwise be thrown out. It has been able to make this work.

  3. John Albert says

    April 22, 2010 at 12:37 pm

    I agree that we should ban plastic bags. I have found that using reusable shopping bags to be a great help.

  4. John Albert says

    April 22, 2010 at 12:37 pm

    I agree that we should ban plastic bags. I have found that using reusable shopping bags to be a great help.

  5. Call Center Outsource says

    April 14, 2010 at 1:54 am

    Using reusable bags is of course the best option (along with not buying things we don’t need). But even if people use just as many paper bags, at least I don’t see them draped from trees and fences or accumulating on streams and wetlands. And both can be recycled.

    Jaime

  6. Call Center Outsource says

    April 14, 2010 at 1:54 am

    Using reusable bags is of course the best option (along with not buying things we don’t need). But even if people use just as many paper bags, at least I don’t see them draped from trees and fences or accumulating on streams and wetlands. And both can be recycled.

    Jaime

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