By
FRANK CARINI/ecoRI.org News staff
About
180 million plastic shopping bags are sent to the Central Landfill annually.Plastic
bags have been waving from trees and clogging storm drains since the 1960s.
These petroleum-based pouches have become the unofficial flags of a throwaway
society. So how do we stop these plastic parachutes from muddling windswept
landscapes and degrading the environment? Do we even have the political and/or
societal will do so?
We
know the environmental externalities associated with plastic bag manufacturing
and disposal include greenhouse gas emissions, and water and land pollution. In
fact, a billion discarded plastic bags is the equivalent of 12 million barrels
of oil.
Opponents
argue that society bears the collective cost of the continued production and
disposal of plastic bags. They note plastic grocery bags clog drains, degrade
marine ecosystems, choke animals and litter beaches, a particularly noticeable
problem in the Ocean State. They note that a million plastic shopping bags are
used globally every minute, and every American uses more than 500 plastic bags
annually. In Rhode Island alone 192 million plastic bags are consumed annually,
according to a 2006 Brown University study.
The
General Assembly and the Rhode Island Resource Recovery Corporation (RIRRC),
which manages the Central Landfill in Johnston, have been proactive, in varying
degrees, in attempting to reduce the number of plastic bags that end up at the landfill.
In 2005, Rhode Island became the first state to provide comprehensive plastic
bag recycling, with a program initiated by the RIRRC called ReStore. The program requires
major retailers and big-box stores that sell more than $8 millions dollars
worth of goods a year to provide a bin for collecting plastic bags.
In
conjunction with the ReStore program, the General Assembly passed General Law 23-18-11.1 — otherwise
called the “Promotion of Paper Bag Usage.” The act seeks to decrease plastic
bag waste by stipulating that retailers must provide paper bags at equal cost
to plastic bags, in spite of the higher cost of paper — about 3 cents for a
paper bag and about 1 cent for a plastic bag.
The
ReStore program was started in large part because of the mess swirling plastic
bags caused at the Central Landfill, and to help maintain the landfill's
capacity. The bags that escape burial are carried by the wind to every corner
of the landfill. To help keep this flock of plastic from flying into
neighborhoods, the RIRRC erected a 30-foot-high fence made of netting that
surrounds much of the landfill.
Of
course, the General Assembly's lackluster promotion of paper bags didn't and
doesn't address Rhode Island’s landfill capacity problem, because paper bags
aren't readily biodegradable in landfills and they add to the state’s waste
stream.
ReStore
containers accept the following plastic bags, but they must be clean and dry:
shopping bags; dry-cleaning bags; newspaper bags; bread/bagel bags; produce
bags; mattress bags; shrink wrap from cases of beverages; electronic, paper
towel and toilet paper overwrap; and bubble wrap.
Low recycling rate
In its first year, the ReStore program led to the recycling of some 18 million plastic bags — a recycling rate of 9.2 percent, according to the Brown study. However, the state’s plastic bag recycling rate hasn’t improved much in the six years since then, mostly because of a lack of compliance with and no real enforcement of the program.
Some
major retailers, such as Whole Foods Market and Staples, follow the ReStore
requirements and have a bin at the front of their stores for customers to
recycle their plastic bags. Next time you visit a major Rhode Island retailer
check to see if there is a bin. If not, contact Sarah Kite, the director of
recycling services for the RIRRC, at 401-942-1430 or via e-mail at sarahk@rirrc.org.
Despite
the best intentions of the ReStore program, and the hollow promotion of paper
bags by a meek General Assembly, some 180 million plastic shopping bags are
still being sent to the Central Landfill annually. The Ocean State’s plastic bag
deluge can’t be adequately addressed through recycling alone.
To
reduce the overall consumption of plastic shopping bags, we need better
consumer and producer responsibility practices — like the one that encourages
the use of reusable bags through a 3- to 5-cent rebate that Whole Foods offers
and Stop & Shop used to, and perhaps combine it with a statewide fee/tax on
plastic and paper shopping bags — or, as Environment Rhode Island argues,
statewide or municipal bans on plastic bags.
This
past fall, the Barrington Town Council, with a big push provided by Environment
Rhode Island, passed Rhode Island’s first plastic shopping bag ban, and just
the second one in New England, after Westport, Conn. The ordinance, which went
into effect Jan. 1, expires in two years unless the council reinstates it.
Environment
Rhode Island is now attempting to bring a plastic bag ban to Providence, and
Rep. Maria Cimini, D-Providence, is drafting a bill that bans plastic bags
statewide.
Around the country
Plastic bag bans are in place in six of the 29 largest cities in the United States — San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Jose, Seattle, Portland and Austin — but no state has yet to enact a statewide ban, fee or tax. Since Jan. 17, Hawaii has had a de-facto statewide ban in place. It prohibits non-biodegradable plastic bags and paper bags that aren’t at least 40 percent recycled from checkout lines.
Other
state legislatures have tried lessening the scourge of plastic bags with the
same kind of ineffectual laws that have been enacted here. California prohibits
the sale of a plastic product that is labeled as biodegradable, degradable or
decomposable. However, its law that required retail stores to adopt an in-store
recycling program and that plastic bags have clearly printed “Please Return to
a Participating Store for Recycling” on them was repealed this year.
In
2009, Delaware passed a law that encourages the use of reusable bags and
requires stores to have a plastic bag take-back program. Two years later, the
Delaware Legislature passed a law requesting a report and suggestions for
improvement of this in-store recycling program — for the purpose of
improving the program and bettering the environment.
In
Maine, a 2009 law convened a work group, through a partnership with state
agencies and other appropriate entities, to work together toward a viable
solution to the checkout bag issue. The work group is to submit a report to the
Legislature that achieves environmental benefits, maintains financial viability
for manufacturers and retailers, and avoids cost impacts for consumers.
Meanwhile,
plastic bags are now the unofficial tumbleweed of the United States.