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Calif. coalition issues report on single-use, reusable bags

March 8 -- A California government coalition has issued a new environmental assessment on single-use and resusable bags.

Green Cities California, a coalition of 10 California cities collaborating to help other local governments work toward sustainability initiatives, released the Master Environmental Assessment today.

The report summarizes existing studies on the environmental impacts of single use plastic, paper, compostable and reusable bags, as well as the impacts of policy options such as fees and bans on bags.

The MEA includes studies that reviewed environmental impacts from the use of the four types of bags, including greenhouse gas emissions, litter problems, marine life impacts, water consumption and ozone formation.

Notably, the report finds bag usage drops up to 90% when retail outlets charge for bag usage.

"We´re not going to recycle our way to a sustainable society," said Dean Kubani, GCC Steering Committee member and director of Santa Monica´s Office of Sustainability. "We need to orient away from single use and towards durable products. We are confident that this report will provide the documentation local governments need to adopt policies that encourage the use of reusable bags and phase out single use bags."

The full report, an executive summary and background information is available at www.greencitiescalifornia.org/mea.

Contact Waste & Recycling News reporter Amanda Smith-Teutsch at 330-865-6166 or asmith-teutsch@crain.com



Comments
Plastic shopping bags are often used for rubbish bags/bin liners, so banning them means bin liners (which are much more environmentally unfriendly) have to be used. If (govt.) subsidies were taken away from non-biodegradable plastic shopping bags (which are made from fossil fuels) & were redirected towards bio-degradable plastic shopping bags (made from organic material) then both would be on an even economical playing field & the unfriendly non-biodegradable bags could not compete. In any case, some reports state that plastic shopping bags (whether made from fossil fuels or organic material) would be the most viable type of material to recycle, if only they could be collected as dense "chunks". This is only possible if indoor compaction is utilized. I hold a patent for a manual compactor bin that costs the same as any indoor bin (in price & user effort) but holds the capacity of indoor electric compactor bins (1x capacity for rigid/heavy material such as glass etc, - 50x capacity for flexible/lightweight material such as plastic shopping bags) but each time a manufacturer gets close to producing them, (government) councils step in & sabotage the project. This is because they (governments/councils) make profits from recycling which is proportional to how much recycling runs at a loss! All the above can be empirically proven.

Guy Pierce
Director
Pactor-Bin
Brisbane, Australia



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