Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Plastic bags: the burden of our consumer lifestyle

I have a pet peeve.
And 5-cents is not going to cure it.

For those who have purchased items at NOFrills, MEC, Big Carrot or other fine establishments know that select (but all too few) retailers in Canada are attempting to dissuade customers from using plastic by charging a bag-tax. In the GTA that "tax" is 5-cents.

Yet, there are some inherent problems. The retailers involved in the ban-the-bag campaign (official or otherwise) voluntarily do so. This means that the majority of retailers in Canada have not yet adopted a dissuasion method of weening consumers off plastic bag dependence. That said, most consumers are not even aware of the impact this tiny, flexible and limited-usefullness product truly has on the environment. As a result, the attempt to reduce plastic bag use and consumption has been sporadic and limited in Canada, at best.

Compare this to Ireland. In 2002, this country of 7+ million simply imposed a plastic ban tax -- each bag used and consumed would cost a consumer 0.15Euros, the equivalent of almost $0.25!! The result? Plastic bag usage dropped by 90%!

This prompts me to consider: should we not simply legislate a change, rather than waiting for a groundswell regarding the plastic bag?

Consider, the facts: the standard plastic bag may take between 500 and 1000 years to decompose (such figures are only estimates because plastics have not existed for long enough for the precise decomposition time to be measured). Add this to the fact that when one tonne of plastic bags is reused or recycled, the energy equivalent of 11 barrels of oil are saved.

At present only a handfull of countries or districts have imposed a plastic ban (typically a large enough tax imposed on consumers at all retail locations for the use of plastic bags). The Plastic Ban list currently includes: Bhutan, France, Bombay (India), Coles Bay (Tasmania), Ireland, San Francisco (USA), South Africa and Scotland. However, despite the handfull of bans, the impact has been enormous.

For example:

  • In the marine environment plastic bag litter is lethal, killing at least 100,000 birds, whales, seals and turtles every year. After an animal is killed by plastic bags its body decomposes and the plastic is released back into the environment where it can kill again.
  • On land, plastic bag litter can block drains and trap birds. They also kill livestock.
  • Plastic bags are not free to consumers – in Australia and New Zealand plastic bags add A$173 million a year to grocery bills (cost to produce and use the bag)
  • The amount of petroleum used to make one plastic bag would drive a car about 115 metres. The 6.9 billion plastic check-out bags we use every year is enough to drive a car 800 million kilometres or nearly 20,000 times around the world.
  • At least 16 million plastic bags end up as litter on our beaches, streets and parks.
  • Not all litter is deliberate. 47% of wind borne litter escaping from landfills is plastic – much of this is plastic bags.
  • Roughly5% of plastic bags are currently being recycled

As a result, I do believe that all levels of the Canadian government should examine the great plastic-bag debate. While businesses do fear impositions on their customers, a nation-wide bag-tax would level the playing field and allow all retailers an opportunity to decrease the plastic bag dependence. Right now, the ad-hoc volunteer approach is just not working. Despite decades of education and knowledge, people still use and depend on the plastic bag. It's time to ween off of this product and, despite good-will, it's time to do this using legislation.

So, I am asking everyone to ban-the-bag. Refuse to use plastic bags. Lobby your local councillor, MP and MPP to examine and implement district, provincial and federal bag-taxes. Do your part.



1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I totally agree. I just wrote the following (http://adamhewgill.com/blog/2008/02/02/plastic-bag-tax/) to my local government, the provincial government and the federal government. I would love to believe that Canada can follow Irelands lead!