Ten billion plastic bags are consumed in the U.S. each year. If each household used just one reusable shopping bag for their grocery shopping it would save enough petroleum to fuel 50,000 cars.
Many food markets now sell reusable shopping bags that are inexpensive and stylish.
Want more proof that plastic bags are harmful to our planet? Read on:
- The production of plastic bags requires petroleum and often natural gas, both non-renewable resources that increase our dependency on foreign suppliers. Additionally, prospecting and drilling for these resources contributes to the destruction of fragile habitats and ecosystems around the world.
- The toxic chemical ingredients needed to make plastic produces pollution during the manufacturing process.
- The energy needed to manufacture and transport disposable bags eats up more resources and creates global warming emissions.
- Annual cost to US retailers alone is estimated at $4 billion.
- When retailers give away free bags, their costs are passed on to consumers in the form of higher prices.
- Hundreds of thousands of sea turtles, whales and other marine mammals die every year from eating discarded plastic bags mistaken for food. Turtles think the bags are jellyfish, their primary food source. Once swallowed, plastic bags choke animals or block their intestines, leading to an agonizing death.
- On land, many cows, goats and other animals suffer a similar fate to marine life when they accidentally ingest plastic bags while foraging for food.
- In a landfill, plastic bags take up to 1,000 years to degrade. As litter, they breakdown into tiny bits, contaminating our soil and water.
- When plastic bags breakdown, small plastic particles can pose threats to marine life and contaminate the food web. A 2001 paper by Japanese researchers reported that plastic debris acts like a sponge for toxic chemicals, soaking up a million fold greater concentration of such deadly compounds as PCBs and DDE (a breakdown product of the notorious insecticide DDT), than the surrounding seawater. These turn into toxic gut bombs for marine animals which frequently mistake these bits for food.
- Collection, hauling and disposal of plastic bag waste create an additional environmental impact. An estimated 8 billion pounds of plastic bags, wraps and sacks enter the waste stream every year in the US alone, putting an unnecessary burden on our diminishing landfill space and causing air pollution if incinerated.
- Recycling requires energy for the collection, processing, etc. and doesn’t address the above issues.
from reusablebags.com






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