The Chronicle

Post-plastic poser

How will you get the groceries home when the bags are banned?

- STAY AT HOME MUM with Jody Allen Jody Allen is the founder of Stay At Home Mum: stayathome­mum.com.au

COLES and Woolworths announced in June they will phase out single-use plastic bags in the next year. This is good news for the environmen­t.

But now we need a solution to get the groceries from the supermarke­t to the cupboard at home.

I find the shopping bags handy. I use them as small garbage bags, and they are easy to store and reuse if needed. But I also know they aren’t great for the environmen­t. At the current usage rate, we as a planet are discarding more than one trillion plastic bags every year.

These bags take more than 1000 years to break down and they release chemicals, polluting the environmen­t. And after cigarette butts, plastic bags are the most common waste found at sea with an estimated 40,000 pieces of plastic floating in each square mile of the ocean.

The supermarke­ts’ solution is a “heavier” plastic bag that will sting us 15c per use. But what other, more sustainabl­e solutions are available?

◗ CARDBOARD BOXES: Bunnings and IGA have provided the leftover cardboard boxes from products for customers to use to take their purchases home. And this is a great idea. But grocery shopping will require far more cardboard boxes than are available. However, check out the supermarke­t to see if they have a cardboard box stash.

◗ MESH DRAWSTRING BAGS: These bags are cheap to buy and handy for carrying groceries, particular­ly fruit and vegetables. They also don’t take up a lot of room, so you can cram quite a few drawstring bags into a handbag so they are on hand as needed. The only negative is that wet items can leak through the bag.

◗ OWN CONTAINERS: It is perfectly acceptable to take your own reusable containers from home. The deli sections at most supermarke­ts are only too happy to seal goods in your containers and place their stickers on the top to process at the checkout. But this can be time-consuming and cumbersome.

◗ REUSEABLE SHOPPING BAG These are currently the most popular option as a replacemen­t for the plastic bag. These bags are relatively cheap, lightweigh­t and heavy duty. They are recyclable but are often not biodegrada­ble. The only disadvanta­ge to these bags is that if they aren’t washed often they can carry bacteria.

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