In 2012, Americans alone produced over 250 million tons of garbage. One large component of this waste consisted of oil based plastic bags, which are utilized excessively by grocers, restaurants, and stores nationwide. In order to reduce this source of waste, many countries are banning plastic bags or taxing customers for their use. Utilizing at least two scholarly sources, discuss at least two environmental problems caused by such extensive plastic bag use? If you were in charge what plan might you propose to reduce or eliminate their use? Discuss the economic impacts of implementing your plan versus the financial impacts of making no change in our current use.…
There are many communities, groups and people spend their time advocating how plastic bags damage the environment. For instance, Californians Against Waste, a non-profit organization founded in 1977, strives to prevent pollution and protect California’s environment many years. They sponsored and help complete almost all of California’s predominant recycling legislations. Recently, they have succeeded in contributing in exposing the plastic bag ban in public. They will keep on preventing plastic bags pollution, and they want to make sure the ban will be effective in California State. Not only do people stop producing plastic bags will impact the economy, the pollution they produce will also affect the economy. California Agasint Waste concludes that single-use plastic bags cost taxpayers money to clean up. They state that California spends around $34.2 million to $107 million every year to prevent people from littering plastic bags into the waters (“The Problem with Plastic Bags”). It is weird that people spend the money producing plastic bags to earn more; at the same time, they spend money again dealing with their disposal. Such huge amount of money can be invested into other fields to make society better, such as inventing new materials to decompose plastic bags faster. However, people are indifferent to the disastrous effect. Overall, there are hundreds of groups gather together to…
To enhance the emotional responses and have the audience in total agreement the writer also uses the expert opinion of the Chairman of Clean up Australia Ian Kiernan. According to the article, Kiernan stated a, along the lines of; “only a total ban on plastic bags would be effective in reducing the numbers being discarded and causing environmental damage. “Being exposed to the words of someone who had a lot of understanding on the subject makes it even harder to deny the message of the article.…
When the single-use plastic shopping bag was introduced to consumers worldwide in the mid 1960s, a time when governments encouraged their economies into extravagant consumerist lifestyles, I doubt the general population considered the consequences these bags would have on our environment. These bags revolutionized commercial industry by providing us with lightweight, water-resistant, flexible bags for a hassle-free shopping experience. We so thoroughly adopted the practice of consumption that by 2004 an estimated 4 to 5 trillion bags were produced globally, with Northern America and Western Europe accounting for more than 80% of the use of this product (Behind the Scenes). Were the plastic bags to end up solely in landfills, they would compare better even than paper bags for their effect on the environment since neither type decomposes well in such a situation. These innocuous seeming bags, however, often times go where they should not. They can be found washed up along coastlines, tangled in tree limbs, clogged inside gutters and water outflows, wrapped around fences, and even caught in the throats of animals mistaking the bags for food. It is documented that over 267 species of animals have been found suffering from entanglement and ingestation of plastic marine debris (Ocean in peril). Every year, tens of thousands of whales, birds, seals, and turtles die from contact with ocean-borne plastic bags. Even if the bag manages to disintegrate somewhat (even though estimates place decay happening over a 1,000 year period) it poses a threat to smaller marine life that accidentally ingest toxic chemicals contained in the plastic particles. While some manufacturers have taken it upon themselves to exert an effort in reducing these environmental hazards, such as introducing bags made of biodegradable material, the “disposable” plastic shopping bag remains as one of the most epic global dilemmas of our generation.…
First, there is no mechanism or law to reinforce the use of reusable bags. For example, local governments seem reluctant to develop policy that will discourage the use of plastic bags. In order to reduce the impact of plastic bags, local governments must take some measure that will discourage the use of plastic bags. For example, in Singapore, Shoppers needing a plastic bag are encouraged to donate 10 cents towards the Singapore Environment Council to help finance its environmental activities. Shoppers are also encouraged to decline bags when making small purchases ( Civil Service College, 2014). Second, most supermarkets still provide plastic bags at no cost. Third, there is a lack of public awareness on the impact of plastic bags on the environment. As most of the participants noted during the our campaign. In response to this, I wrote a poem about the impact of plastic…
This is resulting in a loss of already insufficient supplies of oil. In addition to this, plastic bags contribute drastically to litter; if they aren’t recycled, they take a long time to degrade, releasing toxic gases. This can result in habitats being ruined and lead to the death of wildlife. They can also cause wildlife to die of suffocation.…
Plastic bags have been used on a daily basis since 1977 (Williamson, 2003) as a means of carrying items such as groceries as they are not only convenient but also cheap. However, the over-use of plastic bags has posed significant threats to the environment in recent times as they are non-biodegradable and also a threat to wildlife. The primary reason for this concern is that plastics bags are not re-used, but simply disposed of in landfills. These problems have both social and environmental impacts that are of global concern. This essay will begin by illustrating the problems associated with plastic bags, followed by the various ways in which society can hope to resolve this dilemma.…
This is one of the many problems associated with the urban pollutant, but if they were to be completely banned, there would be significant implications. For example, in the state of California, manufacturing jobs would be jeopardized. According to Fox, “Plastic bags are not as bad as some Americans might think: ninety percent of Americans reuse their plastic bags and cotton grocery bags have to be used 131 times before their contribution to global climate change becomes lower than that of a plastic bags used just once.” This is one example of how the ban of plastic bags would not be beneficial. To add more to the idea of consumers bringing their own bags to grocery stores, there are positive and negative connotations associated with either side. Many people believe that fabric bags are environmentally friendly, last longer, and are reusable; however, there is a downside. Since stores do not offer complementary bags that are reusable, they are more expensive for the consumers when compared to plastic bags. With that being said, if a customer forgets their bag, they either have to carry their groceries by hand, purchase more reusable bags, or find alternatives. It soon becomes a cycle of the accumulation of reusable bags––just like plastic…
Plastic bags are made from thermoplastic which is made from oil. China has banned the use of plastic bags and has reduced the amount of oil consumption by 37 million barrels of oil yearly. If the United States would do the same it could lessen the oil consumption it has and the dependency they have for foreign oil. When plastic photo degrade they break down to a toxic petro-polymers and eventually find their way into the soil and water ways contaminating them. These microscopic particles enter the food chain and then enter us from the food we eat. It takes $4000.00 to recycle just one ton of plastic bags that can be sold only for $32.00…
Problems associated with plastic bags include use of non-renewable resources (such as crude oil, gas and coal),[2] disposal, and environmental impacts.…
As humans, we need to try to be super clean and clean after ourselves when present at the beach. If we see trash, we should clean it up. Or if we see people littering at the beach we should let them know that they shouldn’t do that. We can also show them where trash cans are located for trash. Also, when we shop at stores they give us plastic bags. We all should know how to recycle those bags. We can keep reusing same bags with no problems. These toxic patches of plastic bags are too large are too large to be cleaned up. Estimates calculate that the patch of plastic has grown tenfold each decade. And unless the reliance on plastic bags decreases, it will continue to grow, acting as a trap for fish and sea dwelling mammals, as well as destroying entire eco…
Eliminating plastic bags would also be great help to the environment. Each year seven billion pounds of plastic is made. The reason that is there is a great demand in supply. Initially, we would always use plastic bags for every need. Eventually it led up to this great Pacific garbage dump. In other words, we have created this big patch of dump. For example by throwing this trash into the water we now suffer with lead. Lead could really mess up someone’s brain, kidneys, or reproductive system. This gets into your body because the marine life that we consume and goes into our bodies. We can stop this by reducing the amount of harmful…
Some officials say. that producing the bags takes too much energy and they create environmental hazards. The only problem is that plastic is cheaper and create less landfill waste than paper bags.…
The world has a titanic problem with disposing of plastic bags. Literally. Floating in the midst of the Pacific Ocean is a double-vortex of garbage that stretches from the west coast of the United States to the Islands of Japan. The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is composed six thousand three hundred and twenty-one miles of trash. The majority of this artificial waste continent is discarded fishing nets, plastic water bottles and caps, and plastic bags. Obviously, garbage in the vast expanse of the Pacific Ocean may not seem like a serious problem for many people because they assume that it is spread out over such a large area that the earth sort of just absorbs it. Nothing could be further from the truth. Let’s look at the ways that this plastic waste, much of it from plastic bags, are threatening the life of our oceans.…
A few months ago, when I was in Montreal, I was surprised to see that in some grocery stores plastics bags were sold. It is something new because two years ago when I lived in this city, they were free. Now, people need to bring their own reusable bags or buy a plastic bag for 20 cents. Banning grocery plastics bags in Montreal is the city plan as well as some cities in the United States already doing. The aim of this new recycling program is to protect the environment. I believe that recycling is not always effective in some aspects, but it is still the first step that people can do to fight earth’s contamination.…