Happy Earth Day! Unsure what change to make to help our environment?  Start small. Say no to plastic bags and use re-usable cloth sacks or  recycled paper bags and boxes. Need some motiviation? Read below. It's  pretty disturbing.
Plastic bags are killing us
The  most ubiquitous consumer item on Earth, the lowly plastic bag is an  environmental scourge like none other, sapping the life out of our  oceans and thwarting our attempts to recycle it.
By Katharine Mieszkowski
Aug.  10, 2007 | On a foggy Tuesday morning, kids out of school for summer  break are learning to sail on the waters of Lake Merritt. A great egret  hunts for fish, while dozens of cormorants perch, drying their wings.  But we're not here to bird-watch or go boating. Twice a week volunteers  with the Lake Merritt Institute gather on these shores of the nation's  oldest national wildlife refuge to fish trash out of the water, and one  of their prime targets is plastic bags. Armed with gloves and nets with  long handles, like the kind you'd use to fish leaves out of a backyard  swimming pool, we take to the shores to seek our watery prey.
Dr.  Richard Bailey, executive director of the institute, is most concerned  about the bags that get waterlogged and sink to the bottom. "We have a  lot of animals that live on the bottom: shrimp, shellfish, sponges," he  says. "It's like you're eating at your dinner table and somebody comes  along and throws a plastic tarp over your dinner table and you."
This  morning, a turtle feeds serenely next to a half submerged Walgreens  bag. The bag looks ghostly, ethereal even, floating, as if in some kind  of purgatory suspended between its briefly useful past and its  none-too-promising future. A bright blue bags floats just out of reach,  while a duck cruises by. Here's a Ziploc bag, there a Safeway bag. In a  couple of hours, I fish more than two dozen plastic bags out of the lake  with my net, along with cigarette butts, candy wrappers and a soccer  ball. As we work, numerous passersby on the popular trail that circles  the urban lake shout their thanks, which is an undeniable boost. Yet I  can't help being struck that our efforts represent a tiny drop in the  ocean. If there's one thing we know about these plastic bags, it's that  there are billions and billions more where they came from.
The  plastic bag is an icon of convenience culture, by some estimates the  single most ubiquitous consumer item on Earth, numbering in the  trillions. They're made from petroleum or natural gas with all the  attendant environmental impacts of harvesting fossil fuels. One recent  study found that the inks and colorants used on some bags contain lead, a  toxin. Every year, Americans throw away some 100 billion plastic bags  after they've been used to transport a prescription home from the  drugstore or a quart of milk from the grocery store. It's equivalent to  dumping nearly 12 million barrels of oil.
Only 1 percent of  plastic bags are recycled worldwide -- about 2 percent in the U.S. --  and the rest, when discarded, can persist for centuries. They can spend  eternity in landfills, but that's not always the case. "They're so  aerodynamic that even when they're properly disposed of in a trash can  they can still blow away and become litter," says Mark Murray, executive  director of Californians Against Waste. It's as litter that plastic  bags have the most baleful effect. And we're not talking about your  everyday eyesore.
Once aloft, stray bags cartwheel down city  streets, alight in trees, billow from fences like flags, clog storm  drains, wash into rivers and bays and even end up in the ocean, washed  out to sea. Bits of plastic bags have been found in the nests of  albatrosses in the remote Midway Islands. Floating bags can look all too  much like tasty jellyfish to hungry marine critters. According to the  Blue Ocean Society for Marine Conservation, more than a million birds  and 100,000 marine mammals and sea turtles die every year from eating or  getting entangled in plastic. The conservation group estimates that 50  percent of all marine litter is some form of plastic. There are 46,000  pieces of plastic litter floating in every square mile of ocean,  according to the United Nations Environment Programme. In the Northern  Pacific Gyre, a great vortex of ocean currents, there's now a swirling  mass of plastic trash about 1,000 miles off the coast of California,  which spans an area that's twice the size of Texas, including fragments  of plastic bags. There's six times as much plastic as biomass, including  plankton and jellyfish, in the gyre. "It's an endless stream of  incessant plastic particles everywhere you look," says Dr. Marcus  Eriksen, director of education and research for the Algalita Marine  Research Foundation, which studies plastics in the marine environment.  "Fifty or 60 years ago, there was no plastic out there."
Following  the lead of countries like Ireland, Bangladesh, South Africa, Thailand  and Taiwan, some U.S. cities are striking back against what they see as  an expensive, wasteful and unnecessary mess. This year, San Francisco  and Oakland outlawed the use of plastic bags in large grocery stores and  pharmacies, permitting only paper bags with at least 40 percent  recycled content or otherwise compostable bags. The bans have not taken  effect yet, but already the city of Oakland is being sued by an  association of plastic bag manufacturers calling itself the Coalition to  Support Plastic Bag Recycling. Meanwhile, other communities across the  country, including Santa Monica, Calif., New Haven, Conn., Annapolis,  Md., and Portland, Ore., are considering taking drastic legislative  action against the bags. In Ireland, a now 22-cent tax on plastic bags  has slashed their use by more than 90 percent since 2002. In flood-prone  Bangladesh, where plastic bags choked drainage systems, the bags have  been banned since 2002.
The problem with plastic bags isn't just  where they end up, it's that they never seem to end. "All the plastic  that has been made is still around in smaller and smaller pieces," says  Stephanie Barger, executive director of the Earth Resource Foundation,  which has undertaken a Campaign Against the Plastic Plague. Plastic  doesn't biodegrade. That means unless they've been incinerated -- a  noxious proposition -- every plastic bag you've ever used in your entire  life, including all those bags that the newspaper arrives in on your  doorstep, even on cloudless days when there isn't a sliver of a chance  of rain, still exists in some form, even fragmented bits, and will exist  long after you're dead.
Grand efforts are under way to recycle  plastic bags, but so far those efforts have resulted mostly in a mass of  confusion. A tour of Recycle Central in San Francisco makes it easy to  see why. The plant is a Willie Wonka factory of refuse. Located on a bay  pier with a stunning view of the downtown skyline, some 700 tons of  discarded annual reports, Rolling Rock bottles, Diet Coke cans,  Amazon.com cardboard boxes, Tide plastic detergent bottles and StarKist  tuna fish cans surge into this warehouse every weekday, dumped from  trucks into a great clattering, shifting mound. The building tinkles and  thumps with the sound of thousands of pounds of glass, aluminum, paper,  plastic and cardboard knocking together, as all this detritus passes  through a dizzying network of conveyor belts, spinning disks, magnets  and gloved human hands to emerge as 16 different sorted, recyclable  commodities, baled up by the ton to be shipped or trucked away and made  into something new again. It's one way that the city of San Francisco  manages to divert some 69 percent of its waste from landfills. But this  city's vaunted recycling program, which is so advanced that it can  collect coffee grounds and banana peels from urbanites' apartment  kitchens and transform them into compost used to grow grapes in Napa  Valley vineyards, simply cannot master the plastic bag.
Ask John  Jurinek, the plant manager at Recycle Central, what's wrong with plastic  bags and he has a one-word answer: "Everything." Plastic bags, of which  San Franciscans use some 180 million per year, cannot be recycled here.  Yet the hopeful arrow symbol emblazoned on the bags no doubt inspires  lots of residents to toss their used ones into the blue recycling bin,  feeling good that they've done the right thing. But that symbol on all  kinds of plastic items by no means guarantees they can be recycled  curbside. (The plastic bags collected at the recycling plant are trucked  to the regular dump.) By chucking their plastic bags in the recycling,  what those well-meaning San Franciscans have done is throw a plastic  wrench into the city's grand recycling factory. If you want to recycle a  plastic bag it's better to bring it back to the store where you got it.
As  the great mass of recyclables moves past the initial sort deck on a  series of spinning disks, stray plastic bags clog the machinery. It's  such a problem that one machine is shut down while a worker wearing  kneepads and armed with a knife spends an hour climbing precariously on  the disks to cut the bags out, yielding a Medusa's hair-mass of wrenched  and twisted plastic. In the middle of the night, when the vast sorting  operation grinds to a halt to prepare for the next 700-ton day, two  workers will spend hours at this dirty job.
Some states are  attacking the recycling problem by trying to encourage shoppers to take  the bags back to grocery stores. California requires large grocery  stores and pharmacies that distribute the bags known in the trade as  T-shirt bags -- those common polyethylene bags with two handles, usually  made from petroleum or natural gas -- to take them back for recycling,  and to print instructions on the bags to encourage shoppers to return  them to the stores. San Francisco Environment Department spokesperson  Mark Westlund, who can see plastic bags lodged in the trees on Market  Street from his second-story office window, is skeptical about the  state's ability to get shoppers to take back their bags. "We've had in  store recycling in San Francisco for over 10 years, and it's never  really been successful," says Westlund, who estimates that the city  achieved only a 1 percent recycling rate of plastic bags at the stores.  "People have to pack up the bags, bring them into the store and drop  them off. I think you'd be more inclined to bring your own bag than do  that."
Regardless, polyethylene plastic bags are recyclable, says  Howie Fendley, a senior environmental chemist for MBDC, an ecological  design firm. "It's a matter of getting the feedstock to the point where a  recycler can economically justify taking those bags and recycling them.  The problem is they're mostly air. There has to be a system in place  where they get a nice big chunk of polyethylene that can be mechanically  ground, melted and then re-extruded."
So far that system  nationwide consists mainly of supermarkets and superstores like Wal-Mart  voluntarily stockpiling the bags brought back in by conscientious  shoppers, and selling them to recyclers or plastic brokers, who in turn  sell them to recyclers. In the U.S., one company buys half of the used  plastic bags available on the open market in the United States, using  about 1.5 billion plastic bags per year. That's Trex, based in  Winchester, Va., which makes composite decking out of the bags and  recycled wood. It takes some 2,250 plastic bags to make a single  16-foot-long, 2-inch-by-6-inch plank. It might feel good to buy decking  made out of something that otherwise could have choked a sea turtle, but  not so fast. That use is not an example of true recycling, points out  Carol Misseldine, sustainability coordinator for the city of Oakland.  "We're not recycling plastic bags into plastic bags," she says. "They're  being downcycled, meaning that they're being put into another product  that itself can never be recycled."
Unlike a glass beer bottle or  an aluminum can, it's unusual that a plastic bag is made back into  another plastic bag, because it's typically more expensive than just  making a new plastic bag. After all, the major appeal of plastic bags to  stores is that they're much cheaper than paper. Plastic bags cost  grocery stores under 2 cents per bag, while paper goes for 4 to 6 cents  and compostable bags 9 to 14 cents. However, says Eriksen from the  Algalita Marine Research Foundation, "The long-term cost of having these  plastic bags blowing across our landscape, across our beaches and  accumulating in the northern Pacific far outweighs the short-term loss  to a few."
Of course, shoppers could just bring their own canvas  bags, and avoid the debate altogether. The California bag recycling law  also requires stores to sell reusable bags. Yet it will be a sad irony  if outlawing the bags, as San Francisco and Oakland have, doesn't  inspire shoppers to bring their own canvas bags, but simply sends them  to paper bags, which come with their own environmental baggage. In fact,  plastic bags were once thought to be an ecologically friendly  alternative to cutting down trees to make paper ones. It takes 14  million trees to produce the 10 billion paper grocery bags used every  year by Americans, according to the Natural Resources Defense Council.  Yet suggesting that plastic bags made out of petroleum are a better  choice burns up Barger from the Earth Resources Foundation. "People say,  'I'm using plastic. I'm saving trees,'" he says. "But have you ever  seen what Shell, Mobil and Chevron are doing down in the rain forests to  get oil?"
Gordon Bennett, an executive in the San Francisco Bay  chapter of the Sierra Club, agrees. "The fundamental thing about trees  is that if you manage them properly they're a renewable resource," he  says. "I haven't heard about the oil guys growing more oil lately."  Still, as the plastic bag industry never tires of pointing out, paper  bags are heavier than plastic bags, so they take more fossil fuels to  transport. Some life cycle assessments have put plastic bags out ahead  of paper, when it comes to energy and waste in the manufacturing  process. But paper bags with recycled content, like those soon to be  required in San Francisco and Oakland, use less energy and produce less  waste than those made from virgin paper.
The only salient answer  to paper or plastic is neither. Bring a reusable canvas bag, says Darby  Hoover, a senior resource specialist for the Natural Resources Defense  Council. However, if you have to make a choice between the two, she  recommends taking whichever bag you're more likely to reuse the most  times, since, like many products, the production of plastic or paper  bags has the biggest environmental impact, not the disposal of them.  "Reusing is a better option because it avoids the purchase of another  product."
Some stores, like IKEA, have started trying to get  customers to bring their own bags by charging them 5 cents per plastic  bag. The Swedish furniture company donates the proceeds from the bag  sales to a conservation group. Another solution just might be fashion.  Bringing your own bag -- or BYOB as Whole Foods dubs it -- is the latest  eco-chic statement. When designer Anya Hindmarch's "I am not a plastic  bag" bag hit stores in Taiwan, there was so much demand for the  limited-edition bag that the riot police had to be called in to control a  stampede, which sent 30 people to the hospital.
 
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ReplyDeleteI saw a lot of fantastic sights on a recent trip to Ireland. But it was only after I came home that I realized there was a common staple of life that I hadn’t seen there.
ReplyDeleteThis year’s Earth Day theme is “End Plastic Pollution,” and I discovered that Ireland, progressive little country that it is, had passed a plastic bag tax in 2002. It was then I realized I hadn’t seen any plastic bags in Ireland.
No bags blew through the air like kites on the Ring of Kerry. No one bagged my T-shirts in plastic at the Killarney Brewery. The streets of Dublin yielded not one siting of the ubiquitous bag lofting over the River Liffey.
Ireland hadn’t “banned” the plastic bag, but when they placed a fairly steep tax — about 22 euros cents or 33 cents American — they also started a public relations campaign to explain the importance of ending the reliance on plastic. Soon, lots of ordinary people began purchasing reusable canvas bags and keeping them handy.
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