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| Sorting through plastic grocery bags | |
| January 2008 There's no escape! Plastic grocery bags are everywhere. They proliferate in boxes, desk drawers, cars, basements, lockers, closets and utility rooms. They blow around roadways, contributing to litter. They fly off landfill sites, causing a hazard to wildlife. RCM estimates that Manitobans carry home more than 200-million disposable plastic bags provided by grocery stores and retail shops every year. How can we make this stop? What's a person to do?
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![]() Transit rider with reusable cloth bag. |
| What RCM Recommends | |
* Purchase and use reusable bags. * Remember to bring one with you when you go out. As one cheeky British campaign puts it, "Take the old bag shopping." * Before your order is processed, tell the cashier that you have your own bags. * If you need to accept a disposable plastic bag, reuse it as many times as you can before disposing of it. * Make sure any disposable bags in your care do not become litter. * Encourage stores to take back the plastic bags they have provided. |
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| RCM's Position | |
RCM notes that a comprehensive approach to waste reduction
and management would include plastic bags as a material designated under
an Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) program. However, while details
of EPR programs are being developed in Manitoba and nationally in Canada,
the above interim measures are required to raise consumer awareness and
promote a shift to reusable alternatives in place of single-use disposable
plastic grocery bags. |
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| You Were Asking | |
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Where do I get reusable bags? Ask for them wherever you shop, at your grocery store and other retail outlets. Environment stores have them for sale. From time to time, community non-profit groups may sell reusable bags as a fund-raiser. What is the best material? It's a matter of intended use and personal taste. Reusable bags are typically made from materials such as nylon, cotton canvas, hemp, polyester, or woven polypropylene. If you are planning to fill the bags with heavy goods, you'll want something strong and durable, but probably not too big. Since you will be using them repeatedly over a long time, check for washing instructions. |
Why not just ban plastic grocery bags altogether? RCM has not called for a complete ban at this time. There are specific uses where a plastic bag may be the container of choice. For example, if a consumer is carrying meat products from a store, a plastic bag may be more sanitary than a cloth or nylon bag. top |
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| Background Notes and Considerations | |
* Plastic grocery bags are convenient for consumers and retailers. They protect goods that are being transported by customers, are inexpensive, and enjoy wide consumer acceptance. Reusable bags are also strong, convenient, a great promotional vehicle for retailers, and popular with consumers. * Some conventional plastic grocery bags can be reused -- as garbage can liners, for pet waste, to protect school books, for storing small items and for other purposes. * Disposable grocery bags are generally made from either #2 plastic (high-density polyethylene, or HDPE) or #4 plastic (low-density polyethylene, or LDPE). These materials are derived from refined petroleum and can be recycled where programs exist. * Only a small proportion of petroleum goes into the production of plastic bags. Most is used as fuel for transportation, for space heating and in industrial processes. * Plastic bags constitute less than one per cent of landfill waste by weight. * In practice, plastic bags are awkward to handle and expensive to recycle, because they are so light. Depending on size and weight, it can take up to 150,000 bags to make a tonne. Collecting, baling and shipping all those bags uses a lot of energy and costs money. But if we are going to have unused post-consumer plastic bags, they do need to be recycled. Experience elsewhere indicates that less than 4 per cent of plastic grocery bags are currently recycled. * In Winnipeg, plastic bags can't be put into household blue boxes because the bags clog the automated machinery that sorts the co-mingled recyclables. * It can take 1,000 years or more for a conventional plastic bag to decompose in a landfill. * Biodegradable plastic bags will more quickly break down into smaller bits of plastic in a landfill. However, the residues are still petroleum-based plastic. * Compostable bags can be made from non-fossil fuel materials such as vegetable oil and corn starch. They are more expensive than regular plastic bags. Composting them in a backyard bin can work if people have active (hot) and well-managed compost piles. They do also compost in a landfill, although in that case they produce methane, a powerful greenhouse gas that contributes to climate change. * In 2002, Ireland imposed an eco-tax of about $0.21 per bag at retail. Distribution of plastic grocery bags fell by 90 per cent following the introduction of their policy. top |
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| Plastic Bags in Perspective | |
RCM calculates that annual per capita plastic bag consumption by Manitobans uses petroleum roughly equal to 1.9 litres of gasoline per person. That’s about what a reasonably fuel-efficient mid-size car would burn in driving 23 km in the city or 31 km on the highway. If people were to reduce their annual driving by that amount, they would achieve approximately the same net resource conservation benefit as eliminating their use of grocery plastic bags for a year. If we want to tackle climate change and cut fossil
fuel consumption, let’s not lose sight of the critical need to drive less, heat our
homes more efficiently, and buy local goods that don’t require
transportation from far-away places -- in addition to cutting our use
of disposable plastic grocery bags. |
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| Notes: About Those Numbers | |
* HOW MUCH PETROLEUM? * IT ADDS UP! |
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