Are we drowning? Yes, as a matter of fact we are drowning. We are drowning in a sea of plastic bags. The numbers will amaze and astound you.
By the time you've read this sentence, Americans will have thrown away over 15,000 plastic bags. They will have recycled about 150.
The simple plastic grocery bag is an amazing invention. Plastic bags are strong, inexpensive, and durable. They can be used to hold groceries, lunches, clothes (dirty or clean), prescriptions, trash and more.
But there's a problem with plastic grocery bags. Once they're made, they basically never go away. In a landfill, a bag may take over 1,000 years to break down. In other words, the bag you carried home from the store yesterday might still be there for your great great great grandchildren's great great great grandchildren to enjoy. What an heirloom!
Of course, many grocery bags don't go to a landfill. They end up polluting rivers, oceans, beaches, forests, parks, streets, parking lots, schoolyards, backyards, and athletic fields.
This pollution is deadly. Californians Against Waste claim that 100,000 turtles and marine mammals are killed each year by plastic marine debris. That's approximately one every five minutes. A cow in New Delhi died after ingesting 35,000 plastic bags, according to Indian media reports.
While yesterday's plastic bags sully the landscape and kill wildlife, more and more plastic bags are being manufactured today. According to Salon.com, Americans use over 100 billion plastic bags each year. That's 274 million plastic bags a day, or over 3100 per second.
Reuseablebags.com estimates that about 12 million barrels of oil are used annually to manufacture the plastic bags used in the United States. That's enough oil to create about 240 million gallons of gas, which could fuel over 500,000 cars with gas for an entire year.
We're swimming in a sea of plastic bags. If we don't act fast, we may drown. Fortunately, there are several easy steps you can take to help reduce the plastic bag waste you produce.
First, stop using plastic bags in the grocery store. Don't replace them with paper bags, which require more petroleum to manufacture than do plastic bags. Instead, replace them with reusable shopping bags.
Reusable bags, often made of cloth or recycled plastic, are inexpensive, large, and sturdy. If each American household brought one cloth bag per trip to the grocery store, we would throw away 10 billion fewer plastic bags per year.
Reuseable bags come in all different kinds. You can get designer bags, such as the ones offered by Hermes for $960. Publix offers a less chic model for under $2. Better yet, look around your house and you may find a variety of cloth bags, backpacks or other suitable totes lying around. Stick them in your car so you don't forget them.
If you do forget your reusable bags, then make sure you bag your groceries carefully. Grocery baggers seem to operate on a per-bag commission, double bagging anything heavier than a loaf of bread. Ask the bagger to fill your bags up, and only double bag when absolutely necessary.
When you get home, don't throw the bags away. Bring them back to the store and drop them in the recycling bin. Experts estimate that only 1.2 percent of plastic bags used in the U.S. are recycled.
These simple steps alone could cut America's plastic bag waste by tens of billions of bags per year, saving millions of barrels of oil, thousands of turtles and marine mammals and preventing countless instances of unsightly litter and dangerous pollution.
Unfortunately, not enough Americans are taking these easy steps. If we don't clean up our act, then government may have to step in. In some places, it already has.
Several countries, including Taiwan, Thailand and South Africa, have banned plastic grocery bags. San Francisco recently followed suit, and other American cities are considering similar legislation. Such legislation is expensive, time-consuming and should be unnecessary.
Citizens need to stand up and act on their own to eliminate needless plastic bag waste.
In the time you took to read this column, Americans threw away over 900,000 plastic bags.
Whether by legislation, innovation or individual action, we must eliminate our dependence on plastic bags. Do your part today.
I give full credit to "Stuart Carlton" for this article. "Stuart Carlton is a Ph.D. student in the Interdisciplinary Ecology program at the University of Florida's School of Natural Resources and the Environment".
Today our family made the decision to make a difference in our world. Starting today we are going to reduce our usage of plastic bags.
Our family challenges your family to make a difference in your world. Will you take the challenge?


Comments: 25
To use up the ones I have, I cut them in strips and crochet rugs out of them. They wear like IRON and are great by the back door (outside) to scrap the snow/mud from shoes. When they get dirty, you simply take a hose to them and they are ready for the next use.
BarbaraLyn
Great thoughts!
So they help me to carry and protect my groceries better while saving the land fills and most importantly animals from harm.
http://www.bestlifeonline.com/cms/publish/travel-leisure/Our_oceans_are_turning_into_plastic_are_we.shtml
To Sheryl L. I'd like to say that there IS a difference. The plastic will NEVER go away. Except for burning, there is nothing on earth that destroys plastic. It just keeps breaking down to the molecular level, at which point it's consumed by animals in the food chain, and eventually us. Nobody even knows the ramifications of that just yet, but there is speculation that this can be tied to the rise in diabetes over the past 60 years or so among other things.
http://www.bestlifeonline.com/cms/
publish/travel-leisure/
Our_oceans_are_turning_into_plastic_are_we.shtml
Lydia - I am in the process of reading from the link that you sent me. It is a wonderful read and some awesome info.
Thank you all!
I reuse bags for everything...and then when they are worn out and ripped I recycle them...our garbage service gives everyone in our community a free recycling can that is nearly as big as our garbage can..we don't even have to separate our recycling into bags...just dump it all in.
Our trash can is nearly empty every week while I stuff the recycling can and usually have to put an extra container out for the over flow of recycling!
I wish every community had a recycling program like ours...I don't know why they don't!