----- forwarded message -----
Date: Thu, 22 Jul 2004 16:49:17 -0600
   From: Teresa Binstock <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Plastic left holding the bag as environmental plague - Nations look at a ban

Plastic left holding the bag as environmental plague
Nations around world look at a ban

Wednesday, July 21, 2004
By JOAN LOWY
SCRIPPS HOWARD NEWS SERVICE
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/national/182949_bags21.html

Imagine a world without plastic shopping bags. It could be the future.

There is a growing international movement to ban or discourage the use
of plastic bags because of their environmental effects. Countries from
Ireland to Australia are cracking down on the bags and action is
beginning to stir in the United States.

The ubiquitous plastic shopping bag, so handy for everything from toting
groceries to disposing of doggie doo, may be a victim of its own
success. Although plastic bags didn't come into widespread use until the
early 1980s, environmental groups estimate that 500 billion to 1
trillion of the bags are now used worldwide every year.

Critics of the bags say they use up natural resources, consume energy to
manufacture, create litter, choke marine life and add to landfill waste.

"Every time we use a new plastic bag they go and get more petroleum from
the Middle East and bring it over in tankers," said Stephanie Barger,
executive director of Earth Resource Foundation in Costa Mesa, Calif.
"We are extracting and destroying the Earth to use a plastic bag for 10
minutes."

The foundation is calling for a 25 cent tax on plastic bags in California.

A bill that would have imposed a 3 cent tax on plastic shopping bags and
cups was sidelined in the California Legislature last year after heavy
opposition from the retail and plastics industries.

The plastics industry took a "proactive stance" by working with
retailers to encourage greater recycling, rather than "putting on taxes
to address the problem," said Donna Dempsey, executive director of the
Film and Bag Federation, a trade association for the plastic bag industry.

The tax proposals are loosely modeled on Ireland's "PlasTax," a levy of
about 20 cents that retail customers have had to pay for each plastic
bag since March 2002. The use of plastic bags in Ireland dropped more
than 90 percent following imposition of the tax, and the government has
raised millions of dollars for recycling programs.

Similar legislation was introduced in Scotland last month and is being
discussed for the rest of the United Kingdom.

Consumers seem agreeable to giving up the bags, said Claire Wilton,
senior waste campaigner at Greenpeace-UK.

"There certainly hasn't been an angry uprising of shoppers (in Ireland)
saying we want our bags for free," Wilton said. "I think a lot of people
recognize they are wasteful. That's why they try to save them to use
again, although they often forget to bring them with them when they shop."

In Australia, about 90 percent of retailers have signed up with the
government's voluntary program to reduce plastic bag use. A law that
went into effect last year in Taiwan requires restaurants, supermarkets
and convenience stores to charge customers for plastic bags and
utensils. It has resulted in a 69 percent drop in use of plastic
products, according to news reports.

One of the key concerns is litter. In China, plastic bags blowing around
the streets are called "white pollution." In South Africa, the bags are
so prominent in the countryside that they have won the derisive title of
"national flower."

The plastics industry says the solution to bag litter is to change
people, not the product.

"Every piece of litter has a human face behind it. If they are a harm to
the environment in terms of visual blight, then people need to stop
littering," said Rob Krebs, a spokesman for the American Plastics Council.

One of the most dramatic impacts is on marine life. About 100,000
whales, seals, turtles and other marine animals are killed by plastic
bags each year worldwide, according to Planet Ark, an international
environmental group.

Last September, more than 354,000 bags -- most of them plastic -- were
collected during an international cleanup of costal areas in the United
States and 100 other countries, according to the Ocean Conservancy.

The bags were the fifth most common item of debris found on beaches.

      CRACKING DOWN

Some countries are cracking down on the use of plastic bags. Here's a
look at the issue:

# About 500 billion to 1 trillion plastic bags are used worldwide every
year, according to Vincent Cobb, founder of reuseablebags.com.

# Countries that have banned or taken action to discourage the use of
plastic bags include Australia, Bangladesh, Ireland, Italy, South Africa
and Taiwan. Mumbai (formerly Bombay), India, also has banned the bags.

# Australians were using nearly 7 billion bags a year, and nearly 1.2
billion bags a year were being passed out free in Ireland before
government restrictions, according to government estimates.

# Plastic industry trade associations were unable to provide estimates of
plastic bag use in the United States. However, based on studies of
plastic bag use in other nations, the environmental group Californians
Against Waste estimates Americans use 84 billion plastic bags annually.

# The first plastic sandwich bags were introduced in 1957. Department
stores started using plastic bags in the late 1970s and supermarket
chains introduced the bags in the early 1980s.

# Overall, the U.S. plastics and related industries employed about 2.2
million U.S. workers and contributed nearly $400 million to the economy
in 2002, according to The Society of the Plastics Industry.
#

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