I’m trying to persuade someone to use green bags when shopping. Everyone says they’re bad for the environment, but I don’t know how exactly apart from being extra litter on the ground.
6 Comments
k f
Go reusable
Go Reusable Bags!
Twenty-Five Reasons to
Go Reusable
Go Reusable Bags!
Spread the word,
Get a sticker
Disposable shopping bags – they’re everywhere. The average American goes through six per week. So what’s the big deal? Multiply that six by our current population (roughly 300 million) and it starts to add up. Here we’ve compiled 25 good reasons to pick up a reusable bag and make the next plastic bag you throw out your last.
*
1
A plastic shopping bag can take anywhere from 15 to 1000 years to decompose. In a compressed landfill, deprived of atmosphere to help them biodegrade, paper bags don’t fare much better.
*
2
Plastic bags don’t biodegrade, but are at risk for photo degradation, light exposure dissolving them into toxic polymer particles. Most often, when this happens, it happens in the ocean.
*
3
The cost to recycle plastic bags so outweighs their value that most recycling facilities will not take them, leading more and more to just be thrown out with the rest of the trash.
*
4
According to the Wall Street Journal, only 1% of plastic bags are recycled world-wide; the rest are left to live on indefinitely in landfills.
*
5
The United States alone uses approximately 100 billion new plastic bags per year – the average person goes through between 350 and 500.
*
6
Thanks to their light weight, plastic bags are the debris most likely to fly away from landfills, settling instead in trees, storm drains, beaches, and the ocean.
*
7
Public agencies in California alone spend over $300 million on coastal litter clean-up per year.
*
8
Plastic bags make up over 10% of washed-up debris polluting the US coastline.
*
9
According to the British Antarctic Survey, discarded plastic bags have been found as far north as the Arctic Circle and as far south as The Falkland Islands.
*
10
An estimated one million birds and 100,000 turtles and other sea animals die of starvation each year after ingesting discarded plastic bags which block their digestive tracks.
*
11
Made from petroleum products and natural gas, plastic bags utilize nonrenewable resources, ultimately helping to drive up fuel prices.
*
12
It takes 12 million barrels of oil to produce the amount of plastic bags the US uses per year.
*
13
Think paper bags are better? The United States cuts down 14 million trees per year simply to supply the demand for paper shopping bags.
*
14
It requires 13% more energy to produce one single paper bag than to produce two plastic bags.
*
15
Made with chemicals processed at high temperatures, paper bag production releases many toxins into the atmosphere at much the same rate as plastic production.
*
16
Paper bags weigh nearly ten times their counterparts in plastic, requiring more fuel to ship them out to stores.
*
17
Despite their high recyclability factor, research shows that only 20% of paper bags end up recycled while the rest share a fate with their plastic brethrens.
*
18
In landfills, paper bags produce over twice as much atmospheric waste as plastic, making them questionable at best as the superior choice for the environment.
*
19
Ireland, the first European country to impose a tax on them, has decreased plastic shopping bag consumption by 90% since 2002, reducing overall plastic bag usage by 1.08 billion.
*
20
In the past five years, over a dozen countries have banned or put a tax on disposable bags.
*
21
Reusable bags come in all sorts of smart and stylish shapes and prints, making your shopping trips a little less routine and a little more fun.
*
22
Some grocery stores even offer discounts for customers who bring their own bags – now that’s incentive!
*
23
In New York City, one less grocery bag per person would reduce waste by 5 million pounds and save $250,000 in disposal costs.
*
24
The average reusable bag has the lifespan of over seven hundred disposable plastic bags.
*
25
Over a lifetime, use of reusable bags by just one person would save over 22,000 plastic bags. Isn’t that even better incentive?
*
Landkins
They are bad for the environment because plastic takes hundreds of years to decompose into the ground.
bernie_bph
Yes, it takes long time to decompose and when it decompose. It will emit green house gas like methane.
Serpent
First of all: plastic bags take a long time to decompose – so they stay around for a while. And they produce non-eco-friendly waste when they decay (chemicals, etc.)
Secondly, because they ‘stay around for a while’, animals can be killed by them. When plastic bags are washed down stormwater drains into the ocean, marine life can mistake them for creatures such as jellyfish and try to eat them. This results in suffocation. Then, when the dead corpse decomposes, the plastic bag remains and floats away. Then another animal might suffocate.
These are just some of the ways in which plastic bags are bad for the environment.
paisan_7
Go to a hospital and see what the bags that hold I.V. liquid is made of. Plastic. Sometimes it is very important to use plastic.
I do see what you mean about the shopping though. But think it all the way through.
They mass produce plastic shopping bags faster and cheaper than paper ones.
I do think if they made those canvas bags free of charge, more people would use them.
Go reusable
Go Reusable Bags!
Twenty-Five Reasons to
Go Reusable
Go Reusable Bags!
Spread the word,
Get a sticker
Disposable shopping bags – they’re everywhere. The average American goes through six per week. So what’s the big deal? Multiply that six by our current population (roughly 300 million) and it starts to add up. Here we’ve compiled 25 good reasons to pick up a reusable bag and make the next plastic bag you throw out your last.
*
1
A plastic shopping bag can take anywhere from 15 to 1000 years to decompose. In a compressed landfill, deprived of atmosphere to help them biodegrade, paper bags don’t fare much better.
*
2
Plastic bags don’t biodegrade, but are at risk for photo degradation, light exposure dissolving them into toxic polymer particles. Most often, when this happens, it happens in the ocean.
*
3
The cost to recycle plastic bags so outweighs their value that most recycling facilities will not take them, leading more and more to just be thrown out with the rest of the trash.
*
4
According to the Wall Street Journal, only 1% of plastic bags are recycled world-wide; the rest are left to live on indefinitely in landfills.
*
5
The United States alone uses approximately 100 billion new plastic bags per year – the average person goes through between 350 and 500.
*
6
Thanks to their light weight, plastic bags are the debris most likely to fly away from landfills, settling instead in trees, storm drains, beaches, and the ocean.
*
7
Public agencies in California alone spend over $300 million on coastal litter clean-up per year.
*
8
Plastic bags make up over 10% of washed-up debris polluting the US coastline.
*
9
According to the British Antarctic Survey, discarded plastic bags have been found as far north as the Arctic Circle and as far south as The Falkland Islands.
*
10
An estimated one million birds and 100,000 turtles and other sea animals die of starvation each year after ingesting discarded plastic bags which block their digestive tracks.
*
11
Made from petroleum products and natural gas, plastic bags utilize nonrenewable resources, ultimately helping to drive up fuel prices.
*
12
It takes 12 million barrels of oil to produce the amount of plastic bags the US uses per year.
*
13
Think paper bags are better? The United States cuts down 14 million trees per year simply to supply the demand for paper shopping bags.
*
14
It requires 13% more energy to produce one single paper bag than to produce two plastic bags.
*
15
Made with chemicals processed at high temperatures, paper bag production releases many toxins into the atmosphere at much the same rate as plastic production.
*
16
Paper bags weigh nearly ten times their counterparts in plastic, requiring more fuel to ship them out to stores.
*
17
Despite their high recyclability factor, research shows that only 20% of paper bags end up recycled while the rest share a fate with their plastic brethrens.
*
18
In landfills, paper bags produce over twice as much atmospheric waste as plastic, making them questionable at best as the superior choice for the environment.
*
19
Ireland, the first European country to impose a tax on them, has decreased plastic shopping bag consumption by 90% since 2002, reducing overall plastic bag usage by 1.08 billion.
*
20
In the past five years, over a dozen countries have banned or put a tax on disposable bags.
*
21
Reusable bags come in all sorts of smart and stylish shapes and prints, making your shopping trips a little less routine and a little more fun.
*
22
Some grocery stores even offer discounts for customers who bring their own bags – now that’s incentive!
*
23
In New York City, one less grocery bag per person would reduce waste by 5 million pounds and save $250,000 in disposal costs.
*
24
The average reusable bag has the lifespan of over seven hundred disposable plastic bags.
*
25
Over a lifetime, use of reusable bags by just one person would save over 22,000 plastic bags. Isn’t that even better incentive?
*
They are bad for the environment because plastic takes hundreds of years to decompose into the ground.
Yes, it takes long time to decompose and when it decompose. It will emit green house gas like methane.
First of all: plastic bags take a long time to decompose – so they stay around for a while. And they produce non-eco-friendly waste when they decay (chemicals, etc.)
Secondly, because they ‘stay around for a while’, animals can be killed by them. When plastic bags are washed down stormwater drains into the ocean, marine life can mistake them for creatures such as jellyfish and try to eat them. This results in suffocation. Then, when the dead corpse decomposes, the plastic bag remains and floats away. Then another animal might suffocate.
These are just some of the ways in which plastic bags are bad for the environment.
Go to a hospital and see what the bags that hold I.V. liquid is made of. Plastic. Sometimes it is very important to use plastic.
I do see what you mean about the shopping though. But think it all the way through.
They mass produce plastic shopping bags faster and cheaper than paper ones.
I do think if they made those canvas bags free of charge, more people would use them.
If you would see my plastic question:
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=AlvJmgqgbpXLsNY_twq50MDsy6IX;_ylv=3?qid=20090321090349AAfwMsp
they are harmful because they take hundreds of years to break down and they can get into our ECO-systems and harm our animals!!!!