Posts Tagged ‘plastic bags.’

5 reasons to say No to that plastic bag?

Wednesday, May 2nd, 2012

Do you really need that plastic bag? Just say no! How often has someone gone to put something in a small bag and you say, no thanks? Yesterday I was shopping and I consciously turned down over 8 plastic bags, the only one I accepted is a most useful large recycling bag! I wish more companies would follow the Warehouse model and charge for bags. I’m a fan and  it just requires a change of thinking.

It’s so easy to keep in your car cloth bags. Yet still so many people load up their supermarket trolleys with bags of groceries in plastic bags – some supermarkets have a policy of only 6 items per bag so you can imagine the waste.

So here are 5 reason to help you get into the habit of saying no to plastic!~ Source

1. They are made using non-renewable resources, either petroleum or natural gas. They take huge amounts of energy to manufacture, transport across the country, and recycle. They don’t break down in landfill sites. They’re incredibly difficult to recycle, causing problems such as blocking the sorting equipment used by most recycling facilities.

2. On land, plastic bags are one of the most common types of litter worldwide. Build ups of plastic bags are notorious for causing blockages in  local drainage systems in developing countries. The Bangladesh floods and Manila’s frequent flooding are examples of flooding due to litter blockages.

3. Swaths of birds have been found dead due to ingesting substantial amounts of plastic bag remnants. All the plastic found in the birds on Midway Atoll is brought to the island by albatross parents who fed them to their young. An estimated 4 tons of plastic accumulates on the island every day.

4. There’s a running joke in New York, where a billion plastic bags are used per year, that the New York City flower is actually a plastic bag caught in a tree.

5. According to the documentary Bag It, the paper bags now used by San Franciscans after a plastic bag ban was enforced there are recycled at least 10 times more than plastic bags were.

Be the change: use a recycling bag, encourage others to say no to plastic, keep saying No thanks, ( especially to the small bags like the one your sandwich or sushi came in), volunteer to do beach cleanups, buy a recycling bag for a friend’s gift instead of using wrapping paper. Nothing like getting someone to use one of these, Victoria Carter, cityhop co-founder suggests a nice new design of Trelise Cooper bags available at Countdown for only $5!

 

 

 

The Whale said thank you

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

 

You may have seen an email that reported  on a front page story of the SF Chronicle, about a female humpback whale that had become entangled in a spider web of crab traps and lines.She was weighted down by hundreds of pounds of traps that caused her to struggle to stay afloat.

She also had hundreds of yards of line rope wrapped around her body, her tail, her torso, a line tugging in her mouth.

A fisherman spotted her just east of the Farallon Islands (outside the Golden Gate ) and radioed an environmental group for help.

Within a few hours, the rescue team arrived and determined that she was so badly off, the only way to save her was to dive in and untangle her. They worked for hours with curved knives and eventually freed her.

When she was free, the divers say she swam in what seemed like joyous circles. She then came back to each and every diver, one at a time and nudged them, pushed them gently around…she was thanking them. Urban legend or not?
According to the San Francisco Chronicle article from December 14, 2005, this story is true although animal experts say nobody knows what was happening in the mind of the whale when these incidents took place.

Plastic bag tax works wonders

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

 

Surprise , surprise, when you charge for plastic bags people tend to use less of them!  Washington DC introduced a charge in January, of  a nickel for a plastic bag, that’s about 5 cents.

 

Yes some people were outraged. But they wouldn’t pay to have them  – Safeway halved the number of bags it used down to 6000 in one month.  The total number of bags used last month was 3.3 million down from 22.5 million before the tax. 

 

The great thing about the nickel charge for bags is that the money from them is being used for environmental projects like a river clean up. Coincidentally 47 per cent of the rubbish in one river basin was disposable plastic bags.

 

The lengths some people will go to, to avoid paying the tax is, humorously written about in this link to the Washington Post. It’s wonderful to read about people refusing bags not on environmental principles but because of a misery attitude. Despite losing her lunch on the pavement one woman wouldn’t pay for a bag. She says,“I’ve never paid for a bag before and I’m not going to start now!” 

 

Cityhop urges supermarket chains and retailers, in fact anyone who offers plastic bag, from the sushi shops to the Warehouse, please think again.

 

Be creative, maybe start off for six months with a get one bag free but subsequent bags are charged.

 

Put this money into a local  environmental project. Who couldn’t support paying for a bag if you knew that it meant you were doing some good and cleaning up the city.

 

Says Terrapass’s Tim Varga, If the objective was to reduce the number of discarded bags clogging up the environment then the bag tax is an unmitigated success.

 

Now for something interesting, watch this 18 minute movie on the journey of a plastic bag as it searches for its lost maker before finally ending its life in the Pacific trash vortex. Click below in case the link doesn’t work.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YDBtCb61Sd4

  

5 worst plastic things

Saturday, September 5th, 2009

Cityhop, NZ’s first car share company offering cars by the hour, founder, Victoria Carter has a gripe – plastic!

She says, “how sad just as we come to Clean Up NZ week (it starts this weekend)  that the supermarket chain, Progressive Enterprises with its New World (one of the sponsors) and Four Square has bowed to apparant public pressure and stopped charging for plastic bags.

Get real people – how hard is it to carry recyclable bags?

My other pet hate the unnecessary plastic packaging of so many items. What are the plastic things you hate? For Victoria they are:

1. Toothbrushes- why do they need such heavy plastic wrap? It usually takes a knife to break it open!

2. Razors – okay so blades are sharp but surely there is a better way to protect the blade? Many knives are sold without all this packaging! And speaking of knives, ever got into this rigid plastic without a knife or pair of scissors?

3. Please manufacturers – deoes everything have to be plastic wrapped?  How about putting things like mascara or other cosmetics in cardboard containers with a hole for hanging on the shelf? Then we can recycle them and not land fill them.

4. I like buying in bulk -and I sometimes buy packs of sparkling water  -i buy kiwi water rather than French not for price but low food miles BUT why do they need to be wrapped in plastic that is also impossible to break open and not recyclable?

5. Plastic bottles of toilet cleaner, detergent and so on. Can we make the containers bigger? Or reward people for re-using the old bottles. Last week two brands of refill were more expensive than the new bottle with the spray connector. That’s silly. Do manufacturers really not care about the environment. I’ve remembered your brand and when I come up with an alternative I will use it.

6 And finally, why can’t supermarkets provide recyclable cardboard trays for us to put loose veges like tomatoes in rather than plastic wrap. Give consumers a choice. Many of us do want to preserve and not add any more than we already do to landfill!

Do I sound grumpy – I’ve just returned from walking the dog with an armful of McDonalds takeways that someone had let blow through Cornwall Park! Fortunately most of it was recyclable (chip packets, napkins, original bag)  so it went striaght into one of our two wheelie bins for recycling.

What do you think is the worst plastic rubbish?

5 ways to clean up New Zealand

Sunday, August 23rd, 2009

How  good it is to see a major supermarket chain (New World) get behind the Keep New Zealand beautiful campaign.  KNZB is giving the country a spring clean on 4-11 September.

CEO of Cityhop, Victoria Carter pictured above, has often gone on about her obsessive recycling compulsion. It extends to picking up other people’s rubbish when she walks her dog.

Tip 1. If we all picked up the odd thing we saw we ‘d probably make those who drop if stop it and we would make everyone else think, oh it’s normal, I’ll join in too and pick up stuff as they walk the kids to school or go to the shops.

Tip 2. If kids see you do this they are less likely to drop their rubbish and more likely to pick it up. Don’t forget to wash your hands! Amazing how much rubbish is from food chains – so good to see McDonalds also sponsoring!

Tip 3. Wake up supermarkets – not everyone wants more plastic at home  Good on you for charging for bags New World but hey what about the fruit and vege dept – can’t we have containers made from recyclable paper. Have a look at what the French put their tomatoes in for example.

Tip 4 Keep all your plastic bags – use them to freeze food. I use mine for kid’s school lunches and picking up the dog’s doings! I know of one enterprising child who recycles his school lunch bags when he walks the family pet!

Tip 5 Keep a recycling bag with you wherever you go – then it’s easy to say No to plastic.

Step 1, say no to plastic bags

Monday, March 10th, 2008

I find it exciting when mainstream publications start running features on encouraging us all to say no to plastic bags. At the weekend, the Sunday Star Times ran a feature telling readers about the problems of plastics in our environment.

We all know plastic is bad – bags take 20-50 years to break down in the ocean. Meanwhile millions of animals are effected.

Tragically most marine animals and seabirds mistake plastic for food. The UK’s Marine Conservation Soceity reports that more than a million sea birds and 100,000 marine mammels and sea turtles die internationally each year from getting tangled in plastic or eating it.

Worse, there is a vortex of plastic somewhere between Hawaii and California that is over 2.5 times the size of New Zealand, an oceanic rubbish heap of jandels, plastic nappies and fishing line, oh and of course plastic bags. Apparantly there is a similar tidal current of plastic in the west Pacific too.

Trashed: Across the Pacific Ocean, Plastics, Plastics, Everywhere CHARLES MOORE / Natural History v.112, n.9, Nov03

Creatures like this giant albatross pictured above mistake this  floating mess for food. Look at its innards and the every day things it has tried to eat before it died.

Every day, 28,000 pieces of litter, much of it, plastic end up in our own Waitemata Harbour. Kiwis go through nearly a billion plastic bags a year, we must start saying No thanks.

When you join up to Cityhop, NZ’s first car share, we give you a clean, green recycling bag to encourage you to say no to plastic. It’s easy, just fold up the small carry  bag with you wherever you go and then it’s easy to say no thanks whenever you are offered a plastic bag. Keep a few in the book so whenever you get your groceries you can say no to plastic.