Showing posts with label plastic bags. Show all posts
Showing posts with label plastic bags. Show all posts

Plastic bags are bad but they are not (all) “made from oil”

    by Michael Smith (Veshengro)

    It is a misconception that the majority of those “free” plastic grocery bags are made from oil, especially foreign oil.

    Plastic bags are either made of a byproduct of natural gas or of a byproduct of oil, not of oil or natural gas itself. It is a misconception to say that they are made from oil.

    Plastic bags are made from ethylene, a byproduct of natural gas or from ethylene created from naphtha, a byproduct of petroleum.

    Chemists string together long chains of ethylene to form polyethylene. Depending on the process used to create the chains different densities of polyethylene can be produced.

    As polyethylene is a byproduct, whether from natural gas or made from naphtha, which is a byproduct of the petroleum industry, those bags, really, but no more demand on the oil reserves and oil imports or those of natural gas, than does the demand for oil for the refineries anyway but they still remain unsustainable products.

    The bags you are given at retail and grocery stores checkouts are High Density Polyethylene or HDPE. They are fairly sturdy, able to hold quite a bit of weight without breaking, optically cloudy, and can be dyed any color.

    Low Density Polyethylene or LDPE are optically clear bags, very light, and often described as wispy. These bags are likely to be found in the produce market or covering your clothing at a dry cleaner.

    In some countries, such as the USA, for instance, most of the plastic bags given away by grocery stores and others are made not from oil but natural gas, and the USA has ample supply of natural gas within its own borders – so no costly imports. Other countries are not so lucky.

    In addition it has to be said that that only applies if the bags are actually produced in the USA and not, as will be more likely the case, in places such as China (or India). The source of the ethylene from which the polyethylene is then constructed we do not know.

    Whatever the source, the fact remains that Plastic Bags Are Bad For The Environment

    Most of what you have read about plastic bags is true. Plastic bags kill wildlife, cause pollution, clog landfills and indirectly raise the price of food at the grocery store. There are also, aside from those made from PLAs, that is to say those that are made from a plastic made from corn starch and lactic acids and such, no biodegradable plastic bags about. That is a fallacy and absolute greenwashing. Ordinary polyethylene shopping bags do NOT biodegrade; they photodegrade. That is to say they break down into ever smaller and smaller particles of plastic in the environment, all the while releasing harmful substances into the soil and water.

    I strongly recommend the use of reusable grocery bags. They hold more, look better, and are not likely to leave your groceries strewn around the grocers parking lot.

    Let us, however, clear up the misconception that plastic bags are made from oil. If they are made “from oil” then it is from a byproduct of the petroleum industry, namely naphtha. They are not, however, made from oil as oil goes. Therefore they are neither made from primarily from foreign oil or such.

    We have enough strong and valid points as to why we should reduce or even ban the use of plastic bags without mentioning the oil factor in it at all.

    However, whether made from a byproduct of oil or natural gas, that is to say from ethylene, they may actually come a long way to us as well, as I have said already. That too should be another reason, atop of the others, why we should get away from the free plastic grocery bag.

    © M Smith (Veshengro), July 2008

Post Title

Plastic bags are bad but they are not (all) “made from oil”


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2008/08/plastic-bags-are-bad-but-they-are-not.html


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The Bane of the Plastic Carrier Bag

    While those bags are, I know, very convenient indeed when shopping at supermarket and general stores as well – one does not have to remember to bring a shopping bag of one's, as one had to in years past before the advent of the plastic grocery bag – they come with a big environmental price tag attached and footprint.

    Trees all over parks and countryside are festooned with plastic bags in different colors and hues and while decorations may be nice and fine and suit a Christmas Tree, in the countryside and in parks this is rather unsightly. In addition those plastic bags are also bad for wildlife.
    Because of their very nature of being extremely light they get blown everywhere, high up into the canopy of the trees and deep into the undergrowth, and they end up hung from branches in the same way as stuck to brambles and thorn bushes deep in hedgerows and in the under storey of woodlands and parks, making everything look tatty and neglected, even if countryside and parks staff do their very best to make the places look nice.

    In addition to this those plastic carrier bags, unless made from corn starch or other such biological material, are made from oil based plastic and are NOT biodegradable. They photo-degrade instead, slowly breaking down in the environment into tiny, even microscopic plastic particles and also leaching at the same time chemicals into the soil, all of which further contaminates the environment.

    Moves are under way, so I understand, from a number of “sources” to outright ban the use of those plastic bags, even biodegradable corn starch ones, maybe, and while I must admit that I do use them as and when, the plastic bag that is, for they come in handy as free bin liners for waste bins at home and in the office, which means they get used at least two or three time with me, I am taking my own reusable ones, often tote bags that come FREE from the variety of fairs I attend, to the stores nowadays and we must all get back to doing this, that is to bring our own shopping bags, just like in the old days. If not always then at least most of the time.

    As to tote bags, I would say, that there is no need, I am sure, to go out and buy such sturdy cotton or jute tote bags (he has good talking I sure some will think now for he has just told us that he gets them FREE on trade fairs) if you can sew, whether by hand or sewing machine. It is quite simple to knock up a couple of sturdy shoppers from some old denim of some other sturdy cloth, such as a bit of Hessian or canvass.

    While you and I, and even all the remaining readers of this journal, if we all did it, may not save the planet on our own be refusing to use the plastic carrier bags, we may, however, contribute to the countryside and parks looking less tatty.

    The problem is that, even if we all stopped using plastic carrier bags tomorrow, the unsightly bags in trees and such will still be with us for some time to come, simply because those that still fly about and hang about the trees will take a while still to break down, before they ultimately sort of disappear.

    Having said this, that should not stop us, though, to make a start now and stop using and begin refusing the offered plastic shopping bag. Mind you, often you do not even get the chance to refuse for you do not even get asked as to whether you want a bang; the purchases are shoved into the bag before you even know it.

    If we do end up with bags of this kind, for one reason or the other, then we must also make sure that we use them at least more than once and then – in the final end – dispose of them responsibly. However, best is no plastic bags.

    © Michael Smith (Veshengro), February 2008

Post Title

The Bane of the Plastic Carrier Bag


Post URL

https://national-grid-news.blogspot.com/2008/02/bane-of-plastic-carrier-bag.html


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