HomeNewsOpinionPlastic bag bans have failed in every way except one

Plastic bag bans have failed in every way except one

You need to use a reusable plastic bag 52 times before its environmental impact drops below that of a disposable one, rising to 20,000 times for organic cotton. A better solution would be to give people the option of using bags with the lowest single-use climate impact — and then charge a discouragingly high price for all carry bags, so that they get reused as much as possible

January 25, 2024 / 11:01 IST
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plastic bag ban
The plastic bag debate. (Source: Bloomberg)

Remember a few years ago, when lots of places decided to ban plastic bags? Remember how we all stopped using them? Yeah, me neither.

Far from reducing the consumption of polymers and the associated pollution, prohibiting single-use shopping sacks may well be increasing both problems. Usage of plastic for grocery bags in New Jersey increased threefold after a 2022 ban, according to a study earlier this month by Freedonia, a market research company, pushing the emissions used in manufacturing them up about 41 percent.

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Anyone who has been at a post-ban checkout can work out the reason. Old-style disposable shopping bags, typically made from thin films of
polyethylene, have indeed disappeared from many stores in recent years. In their place, however, we’re now paying cents and dollars for reusable carriers made from thicker, glossy polyethylene, waffle-like non-woven polypropylene, brown paper, or natural fibers such as cotton and jute.

The benefits to the environment from this shift are marginal at best. They may even be making things worse. That’s because the most relevant measure isn’t how many carriers get used, but how much material is consumed and how much pollution it causes. An individual disposable plastic bag is far less damaging in terms of carbon, chemical pollution, algal blooms and water usage than reusable ones, whether natural or synthetic. The case against them is that we use so many more of them that the total footprint will be lower with reusables.