Earthwatching’s Weblog


I’m Not a Plastic Bag!
May 17, 2008, 1:14 pm
Filed under: Earthwatching | Tags: , , , , , , , ,

A blot on the landscape

Finally, one of the biggest culprits of landfills is taking a step towards being obsolete.  The carrier bag, a blot on the landscape in every Country in the world may well be taking a dive.  Some of the largest and influential retailers in the UK called for the banning of Plastic bags, but with baby steps, firstly by charging for them.  A statement by the UK Government’s Department of the Environment began with “UK retailers have agreed to reduce the overall environmental impact of their carrier bags by 25% by the end of 2008″. Read it here.

Many American grocery retailers, such as COSTCO, have been using paper sacks all along for customers’ purchases, so why did the plastic bag grip the UK and the world so much?  As usual it comes down to consumer demand, initially taking off in the early 70′s when the UK really took off from the industrial period to the technological period.  This is when we really saw a trend start in consumer waste and so it seems, over manufacturing.  It was when more and more of our trading left the native shores and importing of cheaper goods from places like Asia became more common.  

When Marks & Spencer first issued it’s press release on the hope of reducing consumer use of plastic bags by charging, it was not long for other supermarkets and large chains to follow suit.  Lidl and Aldi have always done this, so its not a new concept, but due to the UK public being so pleased with this notion, it was only days that the Prime Minister brought out his press release stating how great this was and to the benefit of the public advancement towards reducing consumer waste.  He almost made it sound like it was his idea – this is typical of our piggy-back-riding government. See Here.

Some facts about plastic bags - 

  • A person uses a plastic carrier bag on average for only 12 minutes
  • Only 1 in every 200 bags is recycled.
  • In the UK we use on average 290 a year each.  (This equates to about 10 BILLION in the UK alone)
  • A plastic bag can take between 500 to 1000 years to break down in the environment
  • In the UK at least 200 million plastic bags end up as litter on our beaches, streets and parks ever year.
  • When a plastic bag enters the ocean it becomes a harmful piece of litter. Many marine animals mistake plastic bags for food and swallow them, with painful and often fatal consequences
  • If laid end-to-end, these would stretch to the moon and back five times
  • 80% of shoppers put everything into free carrier bags at the supermarket
  • 100,000 tonnes of plastic bags are thrown away – that’s the same weight as 70,000 cars!
  • Most bags are used only once for carrying goods between the shops and home, which is such a waste, especially when you consider that the majority of free carriers are made from oil – an increasingly valuable commodity
  • One of the worlds biggest producers of plastic carrier bags – China – made noises late 2007/early 2008 that they were going to cease production of the manufacture of plastic bags so to clean up the litter in time for the 2008 Olympics.  A good step in the right direction, but considering a majority of people cannot breathe in the major cities of China without choking, I think they have more pressing things to curb before plastic – see article here.  This is one of the main reasons that many companies world wide are trying to reduce consumer usage of plastic bags, there may well be a shortage very soon. 

    • The carrier bag, if you have to use them, can be reused in simple ways.  So many are used from the supermarket and straight in the bin, but why not reuse it the next few trips to the supermarket or shops?
    • There are many supermarkets that offer a recycling centre for you to dump all your carrier bags, so many people have a cupboard under the sink HEAVING with carrier bags as they feel guilty throwing them away, so don’t, take them to your nearest supermarket and let them take care of that.  From what I have researched, these bags are made into plastic pellets and reused by ethical companies to make many other new plastic items.
    • Use them to split your weekly kerbside recycling.
    • Use them to hold un-compostable food waste such as cooked meat to avoid a smelly dustbin>
    • Use them to store muddy shoes or boots, or as seen as many muddy festivals, use them over your footwear to keep your feet dry.
    • Use them to carry books to school – for the fashion conscious, many high street fashion chains have plastic bags so that you don’t look so much of a dweeb with a tesco bag :)
    • Use as packing material for shipping (you could include a note asking the recipient to further reuse or recycle the bags)
    • Wrap them around the knees when you are kneeling down doing the gardening, keeps your knees clean.
    • No time to make an emergency pre-party run for wrapping paper? Riffle through your bags to find the prettiest and most colorful — or just ones without writing. Triple-bag the gift, then tie all three sets of handles into a knot. Cut the tops of the loops and fan the pieces out to make a plume.
    • Crumple bags to fill the bottom of a large pot that’s too deep for your plant (but be sure not to cover the drainage hole, if it has one). You can cut down on the amount of potting soil needed, and since plastic packs less heft than dirt, you’ll be able to move a big planter around with a bit less grunting.
    These are just a few examples of reusing plastic carrier bags, there are hundreds more ideas on the web, you just have to search for them.  Try here for a google search. 

     

    DEGRADABLE BAGS

    The bags are just as strong as conventional plastic bags, but are programmed to have a usable life of 18 months. After this, the structure starts to weaken as the bags begin to degrade. The end result is that the plastic loses all of the water and gas within its structure to leave minerals that are compatible with soil.
    A UK website claims that their bags are manufactured to be earth friendly.  Read all about it here.

    SO WHAT NOW!

    Taken from Recycle Now, these are the recommendations for shopping - 

  • Use a canvas shopping bag whenever you can. Unlike plastic bags, they won’t split apart or dig into your hands when you’re loaded down.
  • Don’t throw plastic bags away. Take them with you the next time you go shopping.
  • Asda, Sainsbury’s, Tesco and other supermarkets all offer their customers bags for life. These harder-wearing bags last longer – and the supermarket will replace worn-out ones. Alternatively, use cardboard boxes for your supermarket shopping. 

    So the conclusion to this will hopefully be less fluttering tree decorations and less strangled and suffocated wildlife and landfill boosters.

    Some interesting links

    GoGreen – Australian citizens who have had enough of the plastic carrier bag.
    Carrier Bag Consortium - is a group of major UK carrier bag suppliers who have uniquely joined together to fight the possibility of a carrier bag tax being imposed in the UK.  Such a tax would wreck jobs and businesses and do no good for the environment.
    Marine Conservation Society –  Plastic bags ranked number 15 in the top 20 most common litter items recorded during Beachwatch 2007.
    The Science Forums – Real people’s opinions on the plastic bag debate.  To add your opinion, you will have to register with them. 
    Daily Mail – Banish the Bag Campaign – A UK newspaper that is renowned for its successful campaigning. 



  • EarthWatching

     

    Houston – we have a problem…………

    Our lovely blue and green planet is slowly being consumed.  Over populated, over farmed, over fished, incessant deforestation, endless contamination and mindless human acts.  Our mother earth is tired, she has almost given up.  What on earth are we doing?

    Earth may be bigger than many people can comprehend, but she is fragile.  Her force is a delicate awareness of co-habitation.  There is room on the planet for us humans to live as long as we do things right.  At the moment, this is not so, therefore, mother earth will fight.  We are like a parasite, dredging her of all her minerals, tunneling through her crust and damaging millions of years of evolution.  We really don’t seem to care what we do and where we do it as long as WE get what WE want and at no expense.

    No problem, rip those forests down, dam that river, exterminate undetermined species in the name of sport, we really don’t care………………….but we should!

    We now must start thinking more seriously in a global amalgamation.  No one Country can solely cure this disease called humanity.  Act like a human being…………..well no, maybe not.  For millennia we have been “acting like human beings” and look where its taken us?  I for one am not proud of being classed as a human being, maybe its about time for a new name and with that a new global common sense.

    I hope that within my Earthwatching blog that I can point out crucial points that we can all do simply and with a little effort maybe we can start turning things around for the best for us and mother earth.

     




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