Home » Paper or Plastic?

Paper or Plastic?

 

Amy Standen by Amy Standen  December 13th, 2007
,

This November, San Francisco became the first city in the country to outlaw plastic check out bags at large supermarkets, arguing that the bags are dangerous to marine life and hard to recycle. But some studies say paper bags can be just as harmful for the environment. So why target plastic?

You may listen to the “paper or Plastic?” radio report online, as well as find additional links and resources.

Amy Standen is a Reporter for QUEST and Radio News at KQED-FM.


latitude: 37.773, longitude: -122.439


Related posts:

3 Responses to “Paper or Plastic?”

  1. Tania Levy
    December 14th, 2007 | 5:27 pm

    A study published in 1990 (with even older data) is useless to predict current bag recycling and use impacts. In the past SEVENTEEN years, recycling collection has increased dramatically, as has technology for making bags with recycled content.

    The bron paper shopping bags used in San Francisco are required to contain at least 40% post consumer recycled, and 100% total recycled fiber. They are made by Duro bag, in Arizona from recycled brown bags and cardboard boxes, at a modern facility with very low impacts, including glues and inks. See http://www.DUROBAG.COM. Cardboard’s recycling rate is over 80%. Any valid comparison of paper and plastic bag whole-life-impacts MUST take that into consideration.

    Berkeley is looking at a plastic bag ban also, tho different from San Francisco’s, and we are doing the background research.

  2. Shiloh A.
    December 17th, 2007 | 9:27 am

    The fact that brown bags don’t break down in our landfills points to a problem with our landfills and not the bags. Plastic never breaks down. If and when these dumps do see the light of day and the elements, the paper will degrade while the plastic will drift around the planet negatively impacting wildlife. The Pacific Gyre is a scary example of this where plastic from around the world collects forming a massive and deadly hazard for turtles, fish, and birds.

  3. S Tokoloshi
    December 22nd, 2007 | 2:32 am

    Charge 35 cents for each bag.
    Immediately customers bring their own long-term bags. This works in Ireland. Plastic bag litter has ceased.

    “Plastic vs Paper” is a red herring argument, perhaps invented by industry lobbyists.

Leave a reply