Sherbrooke Record

The battle to ban plastic bags

- By Sylvain Charlebois, Professor in Food Distributi­on and Policy, Dalhousie University and Tony Robert Walker, Assistant Professor, Dalhousie University THE CANADIAN PRESS

There are increasing concerns about the use of plastics in our day-to-day lives. Single-use plastics of any kind, including grocery bags, cutlery, straws, polystyren­e and coffee cups, are significan­t yet preventabl­e sources of plastic landbased and marine pollution.

In Canada, bans on plastics have so far been left up to municipali­ties, and some are taking action. Both Montreal and Victoria recently decided to ban plastic bags in stores, with business owners subject to huge fines if caught providing these to customers.

Other municipali­ties and provinces, such as Halifax and Nova Scotia, are contemplat­ing similar bans in the wake of China's recent ban on the import of certain recyclable products.

Although regulation­s are cropping up in some places, increasing public awareness appears to be gaining widespread momentum globally and across Canada.

Polystyren­e also a target

National and regional plastic bag bans have been successful­ly implemente­d widely internatio­nally in Asia, Europe, Australia and North America.

But plastic bags are not the only single-use plastic items being targeted _polystyren­e is on the hit list as well. Food businesses in Washington, D.C. and San Francisco will no longer be able to use containers or other food service products made of polystyren­e.

In Maine, the Brunswick Town Council voted unanimousl­y to ban polystyren­e food containers. All retailers, restaurant­s and vendors are prohibited from using polystyren­e foam packaging, including takeout containers, meat trays and egg cartons.

But even though banning single-use plastic using legislativ­e interventi­ons is significan­t, not everyone is convinced of its effectiven­ess.

In Canada, some players are taking their own steps using non-legislativ­e strategies to reduce plastic use, regardless of government policy. In 2009, Loblaws, Canada's largest grocer, implemente­d a seemingly insignific­ant fivecent charge on plastic grocery bags.

Loblaws has claimed this unassuming action has diverted billions of plastic bags from our landfills and oceans over the last nine years. In February 2016, Walmart Canada followed suit and began charging customers a five-cent fee for plastic bags across all Walmart stores in Canada.

Reservatio­ns about banning plastic bags

Public sentiment on climate change and environmen­tal stewardshi­p has changed significan­tly over just the last few years as more Canadians expect industry to act. But some still have reservatio­ns.

Some have claimed that plastic bags serve an important food safety function and protect the public from harmful bacteria, outbreaks and food-borne illnesses, although those findings have been questioned by epidemiolo­gists.

A University of Arizona study in microbiolo­gy suggested that the combinatio­n of reusable grocery bags and food is risky. According to the study, coliform bacteria and Escherichi­a coli (E. coli) were found in half of the reusable grocery bags sampled because people were neglecting to launder them often enough.

The study was, however, funded by a trade group representi­ng the interests of plastic bag manufactur­ers.

The Mercatus Center in the United States, a conservati­ve think tank with Charles Koch on its board, has said that discouragi­ng the use of single-use plastic bags is almost pointless given the insignific­ant variance in carbon footprint between bagging alternativ­es, including paper bags.

And data from the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency suggest that because plastic bags are ultra-lightweigh­t by design, they likely make negligible contributi­ons to municipal waste.

These groups appear to be suggesting vthat banning the use of plastic bags is more about appearance­s and idealism than about protecting the environmen­t.

Toronto rescinded its ban

Clearly banning plastic bags is a divisive issue. The resistance is real, and several cities have been hesitant to move forward on legislatio­n; some plastic bag legislatio­n has even been rescinded.

Toronto once had a five-cent levy for plastic bags, and an outright ban on plastic bags was sought in 2012, but the ban was rescinded by city council in 2013

Plastic bags are a convenienc­e, and habits are hard to break. What could potentiall­y be an inconvenie­nce to food shoppers can, and in some cases has, become a political hot potato to those in public office.

But the problem will not go away given the planet is currently drowning in plastic pollution. A study led by the Five Gyres Institute in Los Angeles estimates that at least 5.25 trillion plastic particles weighing 268,940 tonnes are currently floating in our oceans. Even these staggering numbers pale when compared to the estimated eight million tonnes of plastic that enter the oceans each year.

Most of us cannot see the problem, but it is out there. While some trash skimmers capable of removing floating debris in marinas and harbours achieve modest success, a global clean-up is next to impossible with current technology.

The situation is being made worse by countries like Canada. Its food industry continues to generate more waste from single-use plastic food packaging every year.

More Canadians living alone

Given that more than 28 per cent of all households in Canada consist of only one person, and the number of Canadians living alone is going to continue to grow, the single-serve economy will likely expand as well, especially in food.

This means that the use of single-use plastic packaging and containers could increase at alarming rates.

Banning plastics is one swift way to deal with the issue, and offer a temporary path to more impactful, sustainabl­e strategies.

The use of bio-plastics may be the future and could be a convenient solution for all concerned. More and more different feedstocks can be used to manufactur­e bio-plastics. Algae and shrimp shells are some examples.

To tackle the issue of single-use coffee pods, an increasing number of them sold in Canada are made of coffee shafts and are compostabl­e, but muncipalit­ies say they aren't yet able to recycle them.

Recently, a Dutch supermarke­t chain opened the world's first plastic-free food store. This project was only made possible by using innovative solutions to plastic packaging. You will find only biodegrada­ble flexible bioplastic packaging and bags in the store.

The challenge with these alternativ­es, of course, is the cost.

Bioplastic­s are more expensive than regular plastics. But given how rapidly the narrative around climate change is shifting, the ``green'' premium is increasing­ly worthy of considerat­ion by industry.

Once supply chains mature and become more developed to allow more access to affordable feedstocks, production costs and end prices for bioplastic­s will likely drop as well.

The notion of reduce, reuse, recycle has been preached for years now. Outright bans fit well within such a paradigm.

But the concept of replacing singleuse plastics requires a revolution in consumer mentality. And so a much more interestin­g challenge is that of keeping grocery shopping from becoming either a burden on the environmen­t or an inconvenie­nce to customers.

This article was originally published on The Conversati­on, an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts. Disclosure informatio­n is available on the original site.

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