The answer to the
problems associated with thin plastic bag use is not a ban, but better
management, writes Lilia Casanova, executive director of the Center for
Advanced Philippine Studies.
Cities in a number of Asian countries, including
China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Nepal, Pakistan, the Philippines,
Singapore, and Taiwan, are currently on the warpath against plastic shopping
bags.
The cities have passed local laws that ban such
bags, on the basis that they clog sewers and drainage canals, cause street
flooding, choke animals, and are responsible for other forms of environmental
damage.
China and Taiwan, for example, impose heavy fines
on violators. Other countries are appealing for a switch to the production and use
of biodegradable bags.
But this misses the point. People do not object to
using biodegradable bags, and consider them a welcome return to the traditional
practice of using shopping baskets and bags made from locally available
materials – such as jute, abaca, and cloth – that are less harmful to the
environment.
What needs to be remembered is that plastic bags
were made for a purpose, and that the main complaint is against the way that
they are used – not their existence.
A multi-use product
A multi-use product
Plastic bags were designed to satisfy a need. Thin
plastic can do many things that paper, which is recommended as a good
substitute for plastic, cannot. Indeed, there are ways in which thin plastic
may be more useful than paper.
For example, plastic bags are widely appreciated
for their use in wrapping food, and holding water and other wet goods. They are
also useful as a protective lining for rubbish bins, as a protective wrap for
delicate clothing material, or as a way of temporarily sealing roof and tap leaks.
These and many other functions make the plastic bag
a versatile, practical invention of the twentieth century.
Another advantage of the plastic bag is that it is
reusable. Although some plastic bags are too thin for reuse, the solution is to
manufacture stronger and more durable plastic film bags, not discard them
altogether.
One reason that plastic film bags are widely seen
as an environmental nuisance is that most are non-biodegradable. But if they
were manufactured from a biodegradable material – such as the bioplastics that
are now being produced in some European countries – the main reason for banning
them would disappear.
Wrong behavior
Wrong behavior
Even with a change of material, however, there is
no guarantee that environmental damage from plastics would stop. This is
because the ‘evil’ is not in the material used, but in the behavior of those
who do not know – or do not care – where, when, and how to dispose of the
product.
Moreover, governments cannot ignore the
contribution to the economy of the thin plastics industry.
Australia, for example, has decided to reduce the
use of HDPE (high-density polyethylene) thin plastic bags but not ban them
because of the negative impact it would have on employment.
According to the Worldwatch Institute, the plastics
industry similarly generates hundreds of thousands of jobs in China, Malaysia,
and Thailand, which in 2005 jointly exported to the 239 million tons of plastic
bags to the United States.
Good environmental management is key
Good environmental management is key
The answer to the problems associated with thin
plastic bag use is not a ban, but better management. The 3Rs – reduce, reuse,
and recycle – of solid waste management (SWM) also apply to plastic bags.
But only a few countries in Asia have sound SWM
systems, even though all of them have regulations on solid waste. This is a
result of a general misconception that managing is the same as regulating.
Managing plastic bags means knowing how to use and
store them properly so that they can be reused many times, and knowing how they
can be recycled when their useful life has come to an end.
Guidelines on how to use, maintain, reuse, recover,
and recycle plastic bags are necessary, and recycling technologies for thin
plastic bags are now widely available.
The guidelines should extend to the application of
appropriate technologies for disposal when the materials have reached their
ultimate limit for reuse and recycling.
Many materials need to be managed if they are not
to harm the environment. Indeed, if not properly managed, paper can be a worse
polluter than plastic bags; it occupies nine times as much space in landfills,
and does not break down substantially faster than plastic.
The need for enforcement
The need for enforcement
According to the US Environmental Protection
Agency, paper bags generate 70 percent more air pollutants and 50 times more
water pollutants than plastic bags, because four times as much energy is
required to produce them and 85 times as much energy to recycle them.
Indeed, as with anything that is designed for a
purpose, both paper and plastic bags need to be managed to sustain their
usefulness and prevent them from disrupting the balance in our ecosystems.
Regulating the use of plastic bags is necessary.
But regulations are not enough; their enforcement is more important.
Banning plastic bags dismisses them as useless, and
disregards their practical functionality, durability, and affordability.
It is the misuse and improper disposal of plastic
bags that is causing harm to the environment, not the product itself. A total
ban on plastic bags will only gloss over the lack of an effective environmental
management policy in a given country. It will not save the environment from the
ill-effects of a ‘throw-away’ mentality.
Lilia Casanova is a former deputy director at the
UN Environment Program’s International Environmental Technology Center
(UNEP-IETC) in Japan. She is currently the executive director of the Center for
Advanced Philippine Studies, and a board member of the Solid Waste Management
Association of the Philippines.
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