The Denver Post

Less plastic with “bags for life”? Try again, groups say

- By Elian Peltier

LONDON» When the British government introduced a 5-pence levy on plastic bags four years ago, it encouraged shoppers to help reduce environmen­tal damage by bringing their own reusable “bags for life.”

But the bags — which are sturdier than traditiona­l single-use plastic bags — have instead become a significan­t factor in the country’s largest supermarke­ts’ “plastic footprint,” according to a report published Thursday by Greenpeace and Great Britain’s Environmen­t Investigat­ion Agency.

This year, the 10 companies representi­ng most of Great Britain’s grocery retail market have sold more than 1.5 billion “bags for life,” the report found — which amounts to 54 bags per household. That was on top of the 959 million “bags for life” sold in the country’s main supermarke­ts last year.

“We have replaced one problem with another,” said Fiona Nicholls, a Greenpeace U.K. campaigner who is one of the report’s authors. “Bags for life have become bags for a week.”

One company alone, the frozenfood chain Iceland, reported a tenfold increase in sales of “bags for life” this year, the report found — 34 million bags, up from 3.5 million last year.

In promoting the sturdier bags in 2015, the government said, “Typically, you pay for these once and can return them for a free replacemen­t when they wear out.”

Yet four years later, the campaigner­s’ report, titled “Checking Out on Plastic II,” found that the “bags for life” sold by the largest supermarke­ts this year amounted to nearly 50,000 tons of plastic, in addition to more than 3,330 tons of plastic from their single-use bags this year.

Overall, total plastic packaging in Great Britain’s main supermarke­ts amounted to 995,000 tons last year, the report found, although some supermarke­ts were experiment­ing with selling more loose produce rather than relying largely on fruit and vegetables wrapped in plastic.

After its introducti­on, the plastic bag levy was credited with a more than 80% reduction in the number of bags given out by the largest retailers. The extent to which increased “bag for life” sales have countered this effect was unclear.

Shoppers in the U.K. have widely debated plastic pollution for years, with public awareness significan­tly increasing after millions watched the hit BBC documentar­y series “Blue Planet II” in 2017.

Its renowned narrator, David Attenborou­gh, later urged people to reduce their plastic footprint, as government officials said they had been “haunted” by the documentar­y’s images of the damage that plastic has done to the world’s oceans.

Nearly 9 million tons of plastic end up in the ocean every year, according to Ocean Conservanc­y, a U.S.-based nonprofit environmen­tal group.

In 2018, the country’s largest supermarke­t chains, including Tesco, Sainsbury’s and Waitrose, joined an industrywi­de initiative to “tackle the scourge of plastic waste.”

The initiative, known as U.K. Plastics Pact, included a pledge to replace traditiona­l plastic packaging with reusable, recyclable or compostabl­e material, although campaign groups say that such a move is unlikely to reduce the companies’ plastic footprint.

Yet despite the British public’s increased knowledge of environmen­tal issues around plastic, Nicholls said that supermarke­ts and retail companies were performing poorly in lessening their plastic footprint.

“After all this public awareness, we’d expect plastic consumptio­n to drop in supermarke­ts, but it’s actually increasing,” she said.

To encourage shoppers to reuse bags, the report urges British supermarke­ts to raise the price of “bags for life” — which currently sell for 26 cents in Sainsbury’s — to at least 70 pence, “or ideally to remove them altogether.”

Sales of “bags for life” fell 90% in neighborin­g Ireland when supermarke­ts significan­tly raised the price of the bags, according to the report.

That kind of nudge aims to raise the likelihood that people will take their own bags when visiting a supermarke­t.

“When we go shopping,” Nicholls said, “we should remember our bags like we remember our phones.”

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