10 REASONS WHY WE SHOULD BAN PLASTIC BAGS.
1. Plastic bags pollute
our land and water. Because they are
so lightweight, plastic bags can travel long distances by wind and
water. They litter our landscapes, get caught in fences and trees, float
around in waterways, and can eventually make their way into the world’s oceans.
2. Plastic bags are made
from non-renewable resources and contribute to climate change. The majority of plastic bags are made of polypropylene, a
material that is made from petroleum and natural gas. Both of these materials
are non-renewable fossil fuel-based resources and through their extraction and
production, they create greenhouse gases, which contribute to global climate change.
The production of
these bags is also very energy intensive. To produce nine plastic bags, it
takes the equivalent energy to drive a car one kilometer (more than 0.5 miles).
Using
these non-renewable resources to make plastic bags is very short-sighted,
considering that the typical useful life of each plastic bag is about 12
minutes¹.
3. Plastic bags never
break down. Petroleum-based
plastic bags do not truly degrade. What does occur is that when out in the
environment, the plastic breaks up into tiny little pieces that end up in the
ocean to be consumed by wildlife. Today, there are an estimated
46,000-1,000,000 plastic fragments floating within every square mile of our
world’s oceans².
4. Plastic bags are
harmful to wildlife and marine life. Plastic
bags and their associated plastic pieces are often mistaken for food by
animals, birds, and marine life like fish and sea turtles. The consumed
plastic then congests the digestive tracts of these animals, and can lead to
health issues such as infections and even death by suffocation. Animals
can also easily become entangled in this plastic².
5. Plastic bags are
harmful to human health. Plastic
fragments in the ocean such as those from plastic bags can absorb pollutants
like PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyl) and
PAHs (Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons), which are known to be
hormone-disrupting chemicals¹. When marine organisms consume plastics in our oceans,
these chemicals can make their way through the ocean’s food web and then into
humans who eat fish and other marine organisms.
6. Plastic bags are
costly to pay for and to clean up after. While we may not pay for plastic bags directly when we go
shopping, they are anything but “free.” Plastic bags cost about 3-5 cents
each, and that cost is then incorporated into prices of the items sold at
stores. The cost of plastic bag cleanup is about 17 cents per bag, and on
average, taxpayers end up paying about $88 per year just on plastic bag
waste. So that “free” plastic bag isn’t so free after all.
7. Plastic bags are not
easy to recycle. As
plastic bags tend to get caught in recycling machinery, most recycling
facilities do not have the capacity to recycle plastic bags
and therefore do not accept them. As a result, the actual recycling rate
for plastic bags is about 5%.
8. Plastic bags have
external costs. Beyond the costs
associated with the production and purchasing of plastic bags by retailers,
there are many external costs that are often not considered. These costs
include the true environmental costs of resource extraction and depletion,
quality of life loss, economic loss from littering, and wildlife
loss. Sadly, such costs are typically not included in most economic
analyses, but nonetheless, these negative impacts are very real.
9. There are better
alternatives available, and jobs to go with them! Once a person gets into the habit of bringing reusable bags when
shopping, it is not much of an inconvenience at all. Reusable shopping
bags are very durable and can be reused many times over the course of their
useful life. The manufacturing of reusable bags is also another
opportunity to create sustainable products and the jobs that go with them.
10. Other governments are
banning plastic bags, so yours should too… or at least make people pay for
them. To date, more than 40
countries and municipalities around the world have instituted plastic bag
bans. The United Nations Environmental Programme Secretariat has
recommended a ban on all plastic bags globally.
CREDITS:
http://greentumble.com/10-reasons-why-plastic-bags-should-be-banned/
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