Which one do you think is "greener": using a plastic bag or a brown bag at the grocery store check out line? As it turns out, they're both pretty bad, each with its own reasons to avoid it. (However, I am anti-plastic anything and if faced with the choice, I will always choose paper. Plastic is evil.) The best option is to bring your own bag. Here are some facts for reinforcement of why we should bring our own:
- "in most of Europe and Canada it is considered customary to bring your own bag...Instead of offering discounts for people who do bring their own bags (like in the US), they charge for those who don't."
- "Plastic bags don't biodegrade, they photodegrade - breaking down into smaller and smaller toxic bits contaminating soil and waterways and entering the food web when animals accidentally ingest them."
- "A plastic bag can take between 400 to 1,000 years to break down in the environment."
- "Plastic bags cause over 100,000 sea turtle and other marine animal deaths every year when animals mistake them for food."
- "Nearly 90% of the debris in our oceans is plastic."
- More than "380 billion plastic bags, sacks and wraps are consumed in the U.S. each year."
- The United States "goes through 100 billion plastic shopping bags annually."
- "Four out of five grocery bags in the U.S. are now plastic."
- "The average family accumulates 60 plastic bags in only four trips to the grocery store."
Source: The Crunchy Wife at http://www.thecrunchywife.com/.
Having trouble with remembering to bring the reusable cloth bags with you? Leave them in the car. After you unload your groceries, bring them right back outside and put them in the car. Or, get yourself a free window cling that will remind you to grab the bags before you leave. You could save the energy required to ship you the little window cling and make yourself a pretty little sign for the backdoor. Whatever works for you, just try to remember to bring those bags with you. And if you find yourself at the store without a bag, just reuse the bag as much as possible and then recycle it when you're finished. :)
Some articles on the brown paper versus plastic bag issue:
- The paper vs. plastic question must die (Grist.org)
- Which is more environmentally friendly: paper or plastic? (HowStuffWorks)
- Paper vs Plastic: The Final Decision (Organic Lifestyle magazine)
- Paper Bags or Plastic Bags? Everything You Need to Know (TreeHugger)
- Plastic bags are the devil (No Impact Man)
-- Melissa, secretary
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