Does Single-Use Plastic Bag Ban Work? | One Small Step | NowThis

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  • čas přidán 14. 06. 2024
  • Does Single-Use Plastic Bag Ban Work? As of March, 1st 2020, single-use plastic bags are officially banned in New York State. Well, kind of…
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    New York’s ban aims to reduce litter and help protect wildlife in the Empire State, where more than 23 billion plastic bags are used each year.
    But with several exceptions for certain plastic bags and research on the unintended environmental consequences of these bans, are plastic bag bans sustainable?
    In this One Small Step, Lucy explores the environmental benefits to plastic bag bans, and sits down with Dr. Rebecca Taylor, a researcher and economist who has studied the unintended consequences of bag bans, to find out more about what this ban could really mean.
    #plasticbagban #sustainability #singleuse #ClimateChange #Environment #OneSmallStep
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    What happens to everything we use after we throw it away? How does our trash impact the environment and contribute to things like pollution and climate change? From plastics and recycling to food waste and composting - we're breaking down the issue of waste and sustainability piece by piece to answer one of the most important questions facing the world today: How do we save our planet?
    From exploring the latest tech and science innovations shaping our future, to living sustainably and protecting our planet from climate change - this is NowThis Future!
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Komentáře • 519

  • @Mussikkienkeli
    @Mussikkienkeli Před 4 lety +317

    Target stores in my state actually give you a .5¢ credit for every reusable bag you use. Which is very encouraging to use the reusable bags

    • @goldfishdoingcutethings5779
      @goldfishdoingcutethings5779 Před 4 lety +1

      Mussikkienkeli which state do you live in? That’s awesomeo

    • @charm3d0n3
      @charm3d0n3 Před 4 lety +14

      It’s actually every state , you just have to make sure you bring your bag

    • @zziggy808
      @zziggy808 Před 4 lety +3

      They stopped it in Ca when the plastic was baned

    • @priscillajimenez27
      @priscillajimenez27 Před 4 lety

      NY does that too

    • @deanatruppa5452
      @deanatruppa5452 Před 4 lety +2

      That's awesome. Whole foods as a .10 back to either off you bill or you can donate.

  • @leiaorgana8710
    @leiaorgana8710 Před 4 lety +319

    Why cant people bring their own bags? I do always have one in my handbag.

    • @michellezevenaar
      @michellezevenaar Před 4 lety +34

      Most people in Europe do. Its been normal for decades to bring your own bag to the groceries stores.

    • @TheTechiemoses
      @TheTechiemoses Před 4 lety +8

      Cause in all the not cramped places. People have space, and storage. So we grocery shop one to two times a month. In bulk. Often when we are already out and can fit it in before we go home. If we forgot, or don't have enough reusable bags, or they got sorry and we haven't washed them all yet. Then we have to pay another tax that came from the out of touch city jerks. City jerks, cause we normally try to be kind and say hi. When we vacation to the big city, you folk swear at us for being kind.

    • @TheTechiemoses
      @TheTechiemoses Před 4 lety +9

      In short, cause people who have different lives or live in different locations do things differently. Cause it makes sense for their situation to do things differently.

    • @steveverdugo8106
      @steveverdugo8106 Před 4 lety +1

      Those are even worse

    • @leiaorgana8710
      @leiaorgana8710 Před 4 lety +8

      @@steveverdugo8106 Why is it worse to use the same bag for years rather than using a new one every time?

  • @korazy
    @korazy Před 4 lety +164

    I started carrying my own cup, straws and reusable bags. It isn't a lot of work to keep them in your purse or your car.

    • @dexter131
      @dexter131 Před 4 lety +17

      What about those who don't carry a purse, or those who use public transportation to get around.. it's just so easy to carry reusable bags in my pockets every day - especially enough to bring two weeks worth of groceries home because we have to buy bulk to save.
      Just because something is so easy, and works in your life, doesn't mean it's right for everyone.

    • @faub3282
      @faub3282 Před 4 lety

      Get a Contigo mug

    • @Sarahlenea
      @Sarahlenea Před 4 lety +16

      ​@@dexter131 Some reusable bags can actually fit in a small pants pocket. But if you have to carry two weeks' worth of groceries on foot, it's easier to have a totebag/rucksack or even a shopping cart.
      I've spent a year in Finland and there the fee wasn't 5 cents but 30, and it was in euros. Believe me, it is very easy to find alternatives in this situation.

    • @loveforgood7520
      @loveforgood7520 Před 4 lety +4

      Many of those items are usually spendy, so not everyone can afford them. Those that can't, choose food and other important items like for babies and toddlers because they need those over trying to help the environment like reusing bags and so on.
      Maybe if middle class and richer people can donate reusable items to those that NEED financial support from the government so they can use those items to help. Keep in mind not everyone tries to help improve our environment, because not everyone cares. IF those that do care kindly show why it's important to help improve our environment by reusing bags at least that could help encourage those that don't care to care at least a little bit.
      You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make it drink.

    • @michaelmiguelicutti2829
      @michaelmiguelicutti2829 Před 4 lety +5

      What if people forget their bags at home? It's a pain to have to go back home to get your bags or buy more reusable. A friend of mine now has a collection of close to a hundred of these things piled in his closet, it's actually hilarious.

  • @kurlykurlz614
    @kurlykurlz614 Před 4 lety +82

    I just came back from Mexico City and I was told it’s against the law to sell or give plastic bags in markets or even malls. I was also told they might stop selling balloons 😳

    • @marvinraphaelmonfort8289
      @marvinraphaelmonfort8289 Před 4 lety +3

      Yay!

    • @kurlykurlz614
      @kurlykurlz614 Před 4 lety +4

      marvin raphael monfort that’s what I said! I was so happy that I took my reusable bag and little did I know.. they even had signs all over the plaza, saying they no longer provide plastic bags.

    • @nunaapop9201
      @nunaapop9201 Před 4 lety

      MsSunhappy I heard that

    • @blackpowderkun
      @blackpowderkun Před 2 lety

      Balloons are still a thing?
      I thought the world is running out of helium.
      I think there are bio-plastics available, not sure about the quality.

    • @toomanymarys7355
      @toomanymarys7355 Před rokem

      Unfortunately, there aren't standards for balloons to make sure they are really biodegradable.

  • @fredflintstone2234
    @fredflintstone2234 Před 4 lety +171

    Answer is yes. What do you think people did before the 1960s?

    • @maria-ok9gh
      @maria-ok9gh Před 4 lety +8

      Well people did use paper bags for a time before plastic

    • @RealMichaelJJordan
      @RealMichaelJJordan Před 4 lety +16

      Maria Limanen paper is bio-degradable which is better than plastic.

    • @MeAMoose
      @MeAMoose Před 4 lety +2

      Michael Jordan
      With the downside of ripping much easier/less durability :/

    • @RealMichaelJJordan
      @RealMichaelJJordan Před 4 lety +10

      Me A Moose then use a reusable cloth bag. It doesn’t matter if plastic is better for use because it’s downsides are being non-degradable and high pollutant.

    • @maria-ok9gh
      @maria-ok9gh Před 4 lety +1

      @@RealMichaelJJordan that's true. but paper apparently causes a lot of energy to produce. So technically, both have equal environmental effects.

  • @epbrown6381
    @epbrown6381 Před 4 lety +97

    My country (new zealand) has banned plastic bags for almost a year now.. its not hard america ,adapt!!

    • @iluvdissheet
      @iluvdissheet Před 4 lety +15

      Yes kiwis! (Is that appropriate?) We Americans should but have you seen our president 🤪?

    • @epbrown6381
      @epbrown6381 Před 4 lety +3

      @@iluvdissheet lol perfect... xo

    • @blkhemi3925
      @blkhemi3925 Před 4 lety +2

      Our lawmakers needed a 6 hours class from Mark Zuckerburg to learn how the internet works. We're still stuck in 1984

    • @MrMaxbout
      @MrMaxbout Před 4 lety +2

      And France is banning every single use plastic starting with bag a long time ago and recently cutlery and cups since 2020😁

    • @someonesle9578
      @someonesle9578 Před 4 lety +2

      And Kenya has banned them for almost four years now

  • @asthmatictuna
    @asthmatictuna Před 4 lety +49

    If you wanted to illustrate the complexity of the issue and recommend reusable bags, you could have illustrated how many times you'd have to use one to beat the outgoing plastic ones, rather than just compare paper to plastic.

    • @keithcallen2844
      @keithcallen2844 Před 4 lety +10

      I've been using the same canvas bags for over 20 years. Despite the high environmental cost involved in cotton production, the negative impact my bags have had are insignificant compared to most others.
      Recently I have been upcycling my kids' old t-shirts into bags and giving them away. People appreciate them and they get used often. They're even fungible with those metal racks used for the plastic bags.

    • @scallaghan2118
      @scallaghan2118 Před 2 lety +2

      @@keithcallen2844 Even paper bags can be reused multiple times. I use them as a liner in reusable bags. It keeps the reusable bag clean and when the paper bag gets pretty worn, I use it to put recycling in the blue bins. I just don't agree that paper bags are worse in any way than plastic.

    • @arizonamonarch
      @arizonamonarch Před 2 lety

      @@keithcallen2844 I recently saw a video on someone who is weaving plastic trash into reusable bags, but the amount of water it takes to clean them is a lot.

    • @idwiw2314
      @idwiw2314 Před rokem

      @Keith Callen your canvas bag will have to be used every day for over 50 yrs to break even on the carbon used to produce it. Unless it's made with metal parts, then it's way longer. Also, it's recommended that you wash your canvas bag after each use. So there is that. But good for you👍 good for the environment.

    • @mixedfeelingsaboutturning1910
      @mixedfeelingsaboutturning1910 Před 7 měsíci

      @@idwiw2314 You see the desk way over there was the bunny lid bunny and creep calm oval shaped nintendo full of sugar and honey gets in your way!!!.. The board over there is not my favorite cd shaped rhino that you better not know about!!.. The ocokie was asking if you went up to the sky and saw a floating fan shaped night light the otherway, you raindeer head!!!.. The rwowel was not the best thingvto use full ofcthe jim jumping boo!!!.. True!! YEO!!! chair!!! question cameo mark!!!.. Spunning upside down cameras week are in my way!!!..

  • @mikegraham4255
    @mikegraham4255 Před 3 lety +8

    Reusable bags have to be used 150 times before they break even with plastic. (They use 150x the energy to make)

    • @mixedfeelingsaboutturning1910
      @mixedfeelingsaboutturning1910 Před 7 měsíci

      See that papa bear shape on the ceiling??!! You better know that bar shaped saws are not the best gym to customers use full of the pillow telephone teletubbies of yes yes yes!!!.. The boing ball over there was the better thing that the fan went down under the iglue that was ignorant full of the oarties that smile on you!!!.. The tea kettle goes and you are full of the buddies that jump up and down!!!.. There was a better question mark in the way of that you button money wart head!!!. The door handle is better for motors anyway

  • @amandamccallum1657
    @amandamccallum1657 Před 4 lety +9

    My bread in a single use plastic, the mayo, mustard, produce and meat too. The only plastic I reused was the plastic grocery bags lol

    • @OwaisFazal
      @OwaisFazal Před 4 lety +1

      I've been trying to go zero waste for a year now and it was frustrating to see how it is almost impossible to get rid of plastic waste...I had the same questions like you do...here are a few suggestions...buy bread from a local Baker, you can ask the baker to give the produce without any packaging ( bring ur own reusable beeswax cloth or smt) or ask for a compostable paper bag, second try making mayo at home it's pretty easy, buy mustard sauce in bulk or buy mustard that comes in glass bottles... about the meat part..stop buying meat from the super market, instead go to a local butcher and bring your own reusable container. It might sound a little impractical depends on where you live...in Pakistan we still pretty much rely on the local vendors rather than the supermarkets...

  • @vickyjansen3544
    @vickyjansen3544 Před 4 lety +16

    Another thing to make a story about is having too many reusable bags. I've had to say no because I have a closet full of them. People give them for free a lot of the time. A lot of times they're not reusable.

    • @marvinraphaelmonfort8289
      @marvinraphaelmonfort8289 Před 4 lety +2

      There's a webarebears episode on that =]

    • @mariachristina97
      @mariachristina97 Před 4 lety +4

      Yes, especially the thin printed ones given out at conferences! They don't look like they can hold anything even a little heavy. A bunch of tote bags even get tossed when donated because thrift stores have so many of them.

    • @mixedfeelingsaboutturning1910
      @mixedfeelingsaboutturning1910 Před 7 měsíci

      @@marvinraphaelmonfort8289 What by a cart you aay?!?! That rail was not the favorite thing you acted like a summer salt and buy a new one immediately!!!.. There wad not eniugh question marks to go around full of the goat lies!!. Thht was a diagonal googly roar that the cra light went out on you!!!.. There was a wobbly jay are fan on you that was acting like a spinning saws that went up to the apple and bite it!!!.. Tou actsd like there was a bunch of smiley faces that grown frowned on you you!!.. There jim!!!.. You better know that tinkertoy and elmo don't have time forcthat

  • @An_Imperial_Guard.
    @An_Imperial_Guard. Před 4 lety +23

    Now we can use the "totally eco friendly" cotton bags instead.

    • @loveforgood7520
      @loveforgood7520 Před 4 lety +6

      Cotton, is better than plastic..
      Use it, when it gets dirty Wash it and then use it over and over and over and over again.
      Where do you think our "recycled clothing" goes to??
      Do you really think those get recycled??

    • @marvinraphaelmonfort8289
      @marvinraphaelmonfort8289 Před 4 lety +2

      Also, seems the bags they gave out were nylon-y but at least they can be reused

    • @bobbys2643
      @bobbys2643 Před 4 lety +2

      @@marvinraphaelmonfort8289 the first step is to ALWAYS eliminate single use products of any kind! A reusable plastic straw is better than 10 single use straws. Nylon is much cheaper sadly so that's probably why they went with that one.

    • @leoniward382
      @leoniward382 Před 4 lety +1

      Yeah, cotton takes a lot of water to grow. I’d say it’s better than single use plastic though.

    • @bobbys2643
      @bobbys2643 Před 4 lety

      @@leoniward382 the best thing we can do is reuse whatever we already have. Whether it be plastic cotton paper etc. As many times as possible. And when you buy a new one you get it from somewhere where it is likely to be thrown away after a certain time like Goodwill.

  • @duckyluver12
    @duckyluver12 Před 4 lety +31

    We've had a bag fee since I was a kid here in Vancouver...and people still use millions of plastic bags. I'm not convinced that bag fees work. Bag bans yes, bag fees for paper, no.

    • @jeffwei
      @jeffwei Před 3 lety

      @@lisal8529 can you link that study?

    • @mixedfeelingsaboutturning1910
      @mixedfeelingsaboutturning1910 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@jeffwei ​ orangish red grease dipping out of beef raco that almost loks like blood especially on the napkin and then do a class about it in rotations when there's others about skeletons and bones too

  • @thenoorer
    @thenoorer Před 4 lety +7

    In morocco. It's banned a year ago. But the replacement is close to plastic that look like fabric. So for a change of substance the answer is no

  • @SCL111
    @SCL111 Před 4 lety +3

    I use plastic bag for trash. One of my fav plastic bag for trash are thicker reusable plastic bag. I also buy thinner plastic bag for trash too.

  • @gillianbc
    @gillianbc Před 2 lety +4

    In our supermarkets (UK), they got rid of the plastic bags at the checkouts, but still had aisles full of garbage bags, freezer bags, sandwich bags and a lot of the vegetables, bread etc was still in plastic bags. They seem to have missed what the ban actually meant

    • @DavidHalverson
      @DavidHalverson Před 10 měsíci

      bread should be actually bought from bakery stores, un-sliced in paper sleeves or bring your own cloth bag, like in the early 20th century (1920s to 1960s). Some bakeries even roamed the neighbourhood streets in the morning selling fresh baked bread.

    • @mixedfeelingsaboutturning1910
      @mixedfeelingsaboutturning1910 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@DavidHalverson what ceiling is making that light?!?! There is not a ring that goes back and forth with the treasure chest beat music wonder shapes!!!.. That was not what you were acting like lou for!!!.. That was the and sign that you kept winning the same same same?!.. There questions and pins!!!.. You are facing the wrong night light when you act this way way way!!!.. Chair one more time or there will be spirals that heaven up the opposite lights!!!.. You know better than to be a laughing trapezoid this time!!!.. You are not mad but you are gat!!!.. The cat was not the best time to keep the wuala from going upto you

  • @bettyjanegayman2133
    @bettyjanegayman2133 Před 4 lety +15

    I think so, for me personally... YES---one small step.

  • @trixiebewitched
    @trixiebewitched Před 4 lety +8

    In our state it's an 8¢ fee per paper bag used

    • @daisynavarro15
      @daisynavarro15 Před 4 lety +1

      10¢ in Washington

    • @trixiebewitched
      @trixiebewitched Před 4 lety +1

      @@daisynavarro15 as someone who actually lives in Washington it's 8¢ per paper bag.

  • @dexter131
    @dexter131 Před 4 lety +5

    Most boxed goods have plastic bags in them, meat comes on styrofoam in a plastic wrap, all liquids come in plastic bottles or pouches, you place your fresh produce into a plastic bag, or it already comes bundled in one, yet the plastic bag at the end is the problem...
    If it's oh so easy to just bring your own bags, why arent you bringing your own glass bottles for milk and and water. What about bringing your own paper cartons to load up your yogurt or cheeses, or how about bringing your own basket to carry your fresh produce in?
    It's easy to virtue signal while continuing to add to the problem you're crying about..

    • @parsabbaluca21
      @parsabbaluca21 Před 2 lety

      this plastic packaging can't be reuse and expensive to recycle and they blame it to the free grocery plastic bag that we reuse and keep for future use. Its all about keeping the cost down of running a business.. She said that a person that uses grocery plastic bags for garbage is now buying garbage bags for the same purpose..

  • @StoneCoolds
    @StoneCoolds Před 4 lety +12

    Mexico did the same nation wide, now everyone needs to use cloth bags lol, im wondering if it is a world trend being tested

  • @cathykirwan2292
    @cathykirwan2292 Před 2 lety +2

    I recently read using cloth bags is not a good choice. We would have to reuse each over a thousand times to justify the water and other resources required to produce one bag. All this information makes it so hard which to use! Is there a study which takes into account all bag choices?

  • @Mark-rz6qh
    @Mark-rz6qh Před 4 lety +27

    I know recycling is intensive too, but are the carbon emissions listed for a paper bag using virgin content or recycled content? :)

    • @RokeJulianLockhart.s4eb2q
      @RokeJulianLockhart.s4eb2q Před 4 lety

      Perhaps it's a total?

    • @MyEconomics101
      @MyEconomics101 Před 4 lety +1

      Recycling will always be a 2nd thought as long as virgin materials (pillaging earth, CO2 emissions) will be cheaper than recycled materials.
      That is why we need not just a price on CO2 but also on virgin materials (minimum pricing on oil, aluminium, iron ore (steel), etc).
      And everyone arguing that you can't just introduce that, because you will harm your economy because the neighbouring country will not do it as well (eg China) and thus make your economy uncompetitive and lose jobs, then retroactively impose a virgin materials tax on imported goods (from countries without CO2 and virgin materials minimum pricing) in form of additional tariffs.
      That's also the way you can impose a financial transaction tax in Europe (aka Robin Hood Tax), which was vetoed by UK (London). Additionally on top of the efforts to track down, close down, block tax evasion/avoidance by the wealthy and Fortune 500 companies.

  • @armonia2491
    @armonia2491 Před 3 lety +3

    What do I use for my small trash cans now 😅

  • @AshGreen359
    @AshGreen359 Před 4 lety +8

    We just have "reusable," plastic bags instead that are only used once

    • @GRAVYRAQUEPz
      @GRAVYRAQUEPz Před 4 lety +1

      Petrol companies will not agree with this!

  • @carlsnell2026
    @carlsnell2026 Před 4 lety +11

    Use Hemp so many uses

    • @blkhemi3925
      @blkhemi3925 Před 4 lety +1

      Just said the same thing... Like, this isnt a new concept. SMH... Just this little idea would make a world of difference... (Pun intended)

    • @bobbys2643
      @bobbys2643 Před 4 lety +1

      @@blkhemi3925 people nowadays think plastic has been around forever smh. Like guys we've only been using it a short while. It was literally JUST invented lmao

  • @shinko6342
    @shinko6342 Před 4 lety +4

    I always reused plastic bags I got. You can use them multiple times easily. I still have the same one one inused on sleep overs as a kid.
    Why should it be a problem people bring their own bags? We only started using this plastic bag invention recently within human history.

  • @anotherrant6688
    @anotherrant6688 Před 4 lety +18

    What about biodegradable plastic bags? They are made from corn. Cloth bags tend to harbor germs from things like meats.

    • @burtonblazekbb
      @burtonblazekbb Před 4 lety +2

      Ldinlove J Corn is a terrible crop they need hemp polymers

    • @salty7056
      @salty7056 Před 4 lety +3

      Ldinlove J biodegradables take a long time to break down. Meanwhile they'll still jam sorting equipment, strangle and trap wildlife and toddlers.

    • @letgo8118
      @letgo8118 Před 3 lety +2

      I Wash my bags in hot bleach water then when the load is finished I hang them to dry

    • @toomanymarys7355
      @toomanymarys7355 Před rokem

      The kind of plastic matters, not what it is made from. And commercial PLA mostly doesn't really biodegrade. (It needs additives to make it UV biodegrade.)

  • @jayrenolds1952
    @jayrenolds1952 Před 4 lety +33

    This stuff goes back and forth.
    80's lest use plastic and paper bags.
    90s: lets only use plastic bags and save a tree.
    00's bring your own reusable bag
    10's lets use paper bags again.
    20''s lets ban plastic bags.

    • @historylvr8000
      @historylvr8000 Před 4 lety

      I miss paper bags...were bigger and more groceries fit into them! As opposed to plastic bags where you end up with like 6 to 8 bags depending on how many groceries one has. I feel the choice should be ours and not forced upon us.

    • @jordanrose2704
      @jordanrose2704 Před 4 lety

      History LVr Dont be lazy. Just bring a reusable bag

    • @historylvr8000
      @historylvr8000 Před 4 lety

      @@jordanrose2704 Has nothing to do with being lazy, but freedom of choice!

    • @jordanrose2704
      @jordanrose2704 Před 4 lety

      History LVr the environment doesn’t have a choice on how we effect it. The least we can do is try and be aware and reduce.

    • @historylvr8000
      @historylvr8000 Před 4 lety

      @@jordanrose2704 I use both reusable and paper...paper can be recycled at least. Never have liked plastic bags at all. Luckily where I'm at paper is a choice for a small fee of 25 cents.

  • @arizonamonarch
    @arizonamonarch Před 2 lety +4

    So, those orange bags they were handing out to all who would take one....what are they made of? Are they biodegradable? What's their carbon footprint? What are they made of? It takes a lot of water to make paper bags. How much water did it take to make the orange bags?

  • @Hypeman10
    @Hypeman10 Před 2 lety +1

    They just assume that banning the plastic bags reduced oil use because it’s necessary for the creation, but they leave out how you can make hundreds of plastic bags with the resources required to make 1 reusable bag. Wtf.

  • @whenindoubtmutemyownmouth5180

    A simple solution to the problem that I've found shopping at Aldi is to just look around the store, if you see someone stocking shelves and they have an empty box just take it the employees won't care because it's one less box they have to break down.

  • @jdubs604
    @jdubs604 Před rokem +6

    I’m from Japan and even though we use way more plastics, our coastal waters and waterways are plastic free. It’s the culture.

  • @unknownuser6809
    @unknownuser6809 Před 4 lety +2

    You don't have to buy garbage bags people. Use seperate bins and containers for for waste and wash them regularly. I haven't used a plastic bag for garbage in years. We did it centuries before plastic and we can do it again

  • @maryx8849
    @maryx8849 Před 4 lety +1

    Here in NM it’s been banned for a couple of months now however stores such as Target is providing even thicker plastic bags marked “ reusable bags “.

  • @TH-lu9du
    @TH-lu9du Před 5 měsíci

    What's crazy is the amount of litter that goes down when instituting plastic bans. It implies that people randomly toss plastic bags on the ground after grocery shopping. WHO ARE THESE PEOPLE.

  • @jennashay8634
    @jennashay8634 Před 4 lety +21

    Getting a really gorgeous fabric bag and always leaving it folded in my purse has been a dead ringer solution for me. I've gotten one from Marimekko and another from LA artist Jen Stark. It's fashion, it takes up about the space of a washcloth folded in my purse, and it is always there so I don't ever have to say, oh I forgot a bag.

    • @sunnyrays2281
      @sunnyrays2281 Před 4 lety

      Jenna Shay, great idea!

    • @arizonamonarch
      @arizonamonarch Před 2 lety

      Well, booyah for you but it shouldn't cost $20 or more for a reusable bag. Ones from the dollar stores may be pretty but, let's face it, they are cheap and don't last. Plus, I am tired of supporting Communist China and it's booming slave labor sweat shops. We need better options from American companies.

    • @ruben7937
      @ruben7937 Před 2 lety +2

      Yes, only need to use that cotton/fabric over 1000 times before the enviromental math adds up;)
      People are too guilable.
      Plastic is much less enviromental pollution compared to fabric bags and paper bags.
      Only real benefit of non-plastic bags are that no animals will accidently eat the nonexisting plastic.
      But the environment will be fuller with pollutions from all the extra polution of producing cotton and paper bags.

    • @toomanymarys7355
      @toomanymarys7355 Před rokem

      Since you are a childless leech (and yes, all those who don't have children they support to adulthood are social leeches), that's nice for you. Other people have families and do real shopping.

    • @toomanymarys7355
      @toomanymarys7355 Před rokem

      @@ruben7937 If NYC cared, they would pay for the in-ground trash system like Amsterdam has and not have bags thar get ripped open by the homeless and rats the blow trash everywhere sitting on the street twice a week.

  • @JamieCormier
    @JamieCormier Před rokem +2

    I reuse them for trash bags so they’re never single-use for me. I get them on purpose so I don’t have to spend money on trash bags. But if you aren’t reusing them, bring your own bags!

  • @vitaemins4527
    @vitaemins4527 Před 4 lety

    I live in NY suffolk county and we have had plastic bags banned since jan 1st 2018. I remember bc i used to work retail at the time and while it was rough dealing with customers complain over it for the first month or so, people adapted quickly and now its just second nature to people. Now with the new state wide ban, some people I’ve talked to barely even noticed bc they got so used to carrying their own bags everywhere even outside the grocery stores. And let me tell you, I’ve seen the difference even outside my own house and around campus. No more plastic bags stuck in trees or blocking storm drains!

  • @MrsMom-yy4yy
    @MrsMom-yy4yy Před 4 lety +6

    What about the carbon footprint of reusable bags? I saw another video on this and for it to be worth it to use one it would have to be used many more times than would be used.

    • @bui3415
      @bui3415 Před 2 lety

      Carbon footprint is propaganda pushed by the oil industry initiated by BP in a series of ad campaigns to shift the blame on you.

  • @yaninaalvarez8048
    @yaninaalvarez8048 Před 4 lety +1

    Chile already banned plastic bags. We had to get used to bring our own reusable bags and if we forget them at home we have a couple of options: buy another reusable bag, use your backpack (or whatever you have) or carry all your groceries by hand.

  • @gabejordan
    @gabejordan Před 4 lety

    There’s a bag ban in my city, b it won’t be fully enacted until June. So the store I work out is still able to give out plastic bags for free, and we’re currently using up our supply of old bags before implementing our new bag system. Even though our bags are still free, most customers don’t realize that, and when I ask if they want a bag, they hesitate because they don’t want to spend 10¢ on a bag

  • @GadgetsGearCoffee
    @GadgetsGearCoffee Před 4 lety +1

    our city also had a single use plastic bag ban, and then all the stores just had thicker plastic bags which I was very confused about - and charged 5c for it. I wonder what that 5c fee goes towards.. if it's just to line the pockets of the grocery stores that's upsetting. Some grocery stores changed to paper bags.

  • @LittleRadicalThinker
    @LittleRadicalThinker Před 4 lety +2

    2:07 Dr Taylor doesn't think one plastic bag has a much bigger environmental destructive effect than 100 paper bags. Carbon footprint is a big deal but considering the plastic bag, forget them both, bring a shopping bag or no bag shopping.. ban all plastic bags, period.

  • @bthemedia
    @bthemedia Před 4 lety +4

    @1:45 Carbon Footprint flaw!?! How do you measure this? Plastic’s carbon footprint is NON-RENEWABLE oil from the ground whereas trees are RENEWABLE and RECYCLED resources! Also energy required for production, transportation, could come from renewable resources as well... there is a weight/volume difference. What is the Carbon / $$ footprint to clean all of the plastic waste litter? Full cost lifecycle analysis and consequences.

  • @weltschmertzz
    @weltschmertzz Před 4 lety +2

    If only we can make manufacturers responsible for their packaging.

    • @OwaisFazal
      @OwaisFazal Před 4 lety +1

      Yes yess yesssss...I couldn't agree more...I've been trying to go zero waste for about a year now and I've almost made it a practice to send an email to the companies that sell edibles in single use plastic.

  • @sophiafelker1942
    @sophiafelker1942 Před 3 lety +1

    The right direction is to educate people not to throw away plastic (bags) into the water.

  • @markraiden8280
    @markraiden8280 Před 2 lety +3

    whats the cardon footprint to make reusable bags?

  • @PositiveZ7
    @PositiveZ7 Před 4 lety

    It worked for my family, we use cloth reusable bags for shopping when we used to go through several toss away plastic bags each week. At home we just have smaller in-home garbage cans and wash them out each week rather than using toss away plastic bags. Due to the smell we keep them out in the garage.

    • @burtonblazekbb
      @burtonblazekbb Před 4 lety

      FTL OP sending food to the landfill is worse than plastic

  • @vickibrown8490
    @vickibrown8490 Před 2 lety

    I’ve been using my own bags for 20 years. I also carry a bag, metal straw, knife & fork & travel cup in my handbag.

  • @SaifHack
    @SaifHack Před 4 lety

    In denmark you have to pay like 30 cents for a cardboard bag or a plastic bags but mostly its recycled or biodegradable but the price depends on the price

  • @vinjulieann1
    @vinjulieann1 Před 2 lety

    I have been picking up trash along a 3 mile trail which goes around a golf course/park for the last 6 years. I used to pick up a lot of the thin bags that float in the wind like little parachutes. I rarely find the thick bags. I personally like the thicker bags for putting the cat litter in. I'm ready for new innovations.

  • @Anonymous-sy7or
    @Anonymous-sy7or Před 4 lety

    There is a great example in wales they did this 9 years ago and saw a 70% reduction in plastic bag use now the majority use reusable bags and in some stores the only bags available are reusable.

  • @weltschmertzz
    @weltschmertzz Před 4 lety +2

    A little self sufficiency goes a long way.

  • @LucianaMilano
    @LucianaMilano Před 4 lety +2

    What bag to use for taking our trash out in the bin of the building we live?

  • @paftaf
    @paftaf Před 4 lety +9

    Let’s bring the fee to $1.

    • @carochan86
      @carochan86 Před 4 lety

      But trash bags will go up 250% in use then..

    • @MrMaxbout
      @MrMaxbout Před 4 lety +1

      @@carochan86 am I really the only that only use one trash bag a month???
      Why using so much trash bags???

    • @MrMaxbout
      @MrMaxbout Před 4 lety +1

      And I agree with you 1$ should do it

  • @heatherweber531
    @heatherweber531 Před 3 lety

    in-light of the Covid-19 that we are still dealing with; Most grocery stores are not allowing reusable bags to be used, what has happened to the plastic bag band? and the paper bag fee?

  • @desarij
    @desarij Před 4 lety +2

    You can reuse the paper bags I do that when I go to Trader Joe’s

  • @itsrieriesworld
    @itsrieriesworld Před 4 lety

    Where I live they somewhat banned plastic bags but instead charge us 0.25 cents or 28 cents depending on where you shop for plastic bags if we don’t want to carry our stuff in our hands 😅

  • @afergie76
    @afergie76 Před 4 lety +1

    Everyone should just bring their own canvas or cloth bags. I haven’t walked out of a store with a plastic bag in over a decade. Only use reusable straws as well.

    • @MrMaxbout
      @MrMaxbout Před 4 lety

      Same !! I just use promotional tote bag I was given years ago

  • @kobe0007
    @kobe0007 Před 4 lety +13

    $0.05 ain't even worth it. Make it painful! $0.25.

  • @BonetheStreetwearCreator
    @BonetheStreetwearCreator Před 4 lety +2

    This says a lot about people’s mindset.

  • @k.c1126
    @k.c1126 Před 4 lety +5

    We're adapting to change. I travel with my bags and rarely get a plastic bag.

  • @DavidHalverson
    @DavidHalverson Před 10 měsíci

    Ontario is eliminating plastic containers for all butcher meats; vegetable wrappers and baggies for produce departments starting September 1, 2023

  • @mariannacampanardi3429
    @mariannacampanardi3429 Před 4 lety +1

    Have you ever heard of biodegradable "plastic"? In Italy, two years ago a ban on single use plastic bags in grocery shopping became effective and, to replace them, stores use very thin bags made of a material extracted from corn. Also, there's a fee of 0.02€ on them. No need for paper bags! I'm surprised that NY's Council doesn't know about this

    • @OwaisFazal
      @OwaisFazal Před 4 lety

      Okay so hear me out..it is just a tactical game to make people less ashamed of their doings...the problem with biodegradable plastic is that it doesn't degrade within days or even months...it takes so many years to fully biodegrade which means it still harms the oceans.

  • @tylerhahn99
    @tylerhahn99 Před rokem

    I usually skip the bag altogether and carry my receipt to the door

  • @Classof2020
    @Classof2020 Před 2 lety +1

    New alternative: Hemp. Strong, durable, less needed to grow, and it absorbs CO2.

  • @timsyweirdo3596
    @timsyweirdo3596 Před 4 lety

    In Mumbai it was a fan of Rs 5000/- to shopkeepers and vegetables sellers but it vanished soon. In shops all the grocery such as lentils, beans are all sold in plastic bags? If shopkeepers make it compulsory and refuse to give plastic bag that would help.

  • @godisgood2345
    @godisgood2345 Před 4 lety +1

    No, because now you pay 10c for one for the option. So what did it really helped? The consumer or the shop? Unless, we are talking about totally eliminating plastic bags, it’s not helping the environment but the businessmen.

  • @sabaalogman7525
    @sabaalogman7525 Před 4 lety

    I work in retail in new York state and paper bags fit way more that regular plastic bags

  • @darkestlight6784
    @darkestlight6784 Před 4 lety

    i've been considering to get a fabric bag instead. Idk what to do about garbage....

  • @ivivion
    @ivivion Před 4 lety +1

    I need the small bags for my trash cans in the house

  • @kennystiefel7343
    @kennystiefel7343 Před 4 lety

    The problem that NYC has created is that they are now charging people do do what is neccessary in survival. A day where people are charged for grocery shopping with no option to carry their groceries home is coming, and today it is $.05 cents, but as we NYers have seen our government raises prices unconditionally, often with no progression in the goal the money is meant to achieve. Like bail reform before it, this is a stupid action by our government, that we will all hopefully see repealed soon.

  • @missdee212
    @missdee212 Před 4 lety

    I live in chicago, I just go outside of the city. Which is cheaper anyway. It may work in newyork cuz people walk a lot more, but not in Chicago and especially not for groceries.

  • @spredluv1
    @spredluv1 Před 2 lety +2

    Every household should've been given a reusable bag on their doorstep by these conglomerate companies...like they do their flyers....instead of paying $3 at the register for the bag!
    If you really have a fuck....I just won't be buying $100 worth of food if none will bag it but me!
    What's the point of a cashier then? A robot can make sure I give cash or swipe a credit card?
    Good by job*

  • @Trainguy9000
    @Trainguy9000 Před 3 lety

    Thanks for this video. It would be great for you to do one focused on NJ's new law that bans single use bags (with exceptions) both plastic bags and paper bags. NJ has 83 miles of coastlines and even more miles of rivers.

  • @lydiacartagena643
    @lydiacartagena643 Před 4 lety +3

    Why can't they bring paper bags back

    • @OwaisFazal
      @OwaisFazal Před 4 lety +1

      Using paper bags isn't a sustainable solution in the long run...It does requires a lot of resources...although it is a better option to replace single use plastic with but not the best option...so in the end reusable bags are the way to go..

  • @ashlie2399
    @ashlie2399 Před 4 lety

    Did anyone spotted an image of San Jose Costa Rica when se mentioned San Jose, California?

  • @Zyks10
    @Zyks10 Před 3 lety

    Carbon footprint can be reduced with use of renewable sources of energy. Issue with plastic is littering and clogging of oceans

  • @ruben7937
    @ruben7937 Před 2 lety +2

    Plastic bag ban does not work.
    It only increases polution drasticly.
    Now people need to buy seperate trashbin bags (instead of reusing the plastic bags as trashbags).
    In addition it is much more pollution from producing one paperbag.
    So you would need to reuse the paperbag many times before it is of any enviromemtal sense.

    • @m.taylor
      @m.taylor Před rokem

      And all the extra trees they cut down to produce paper bags.

  • @cindy846
    @cindy846 Před 4 lety

    Where I live plastic bags have been banned for about a year, and the problem I personally see is that shoppers tend to hoard or re-buy reusable shopping bags, which are often made out of super non-degradable synthetic materials. AND as mentioned here, people still need to buy garbage bags. So, at the end of the line, it's just more and more plastic waste.

    • @crazy808ish
      @crazy808ish Před 4 lety +1

      Yes, now you see in NY all the stores selling reusable bags. It becomes the latest necessary thing, and guess what? More people will stock up, and end up tossing a lot of them. It may not end up in the trees or rivers as easily, but the overall carbon footprint is much worst.

  • @Poemi10304
    @Poemi10304 Před 4 lety

    Uh oh. My parents hated this when they visited me in Cali. Now they have it back home! 😅

  • @accuratealloys
    @accuratealloys Před 4 lety +5

    There’s an additive that would make the bags turn to dust if left in the sun for a given time and the plastic industry lobbied against it so of course it was killed.
    Just get fabric bags. How. Difficult is it really?

    • @emko333
      @emko333 Před 4 lety

      no kidding, here most people use fabric bags and they are prefect reusable and washable

  • @dulynoted2427
    @dulynoted2427 Před 4 lety +2

    I want more than one source of science data and who funded that research.

  • @JnK69
    @JnK69 Před 4 lety

    Several questions:
    1. What about textile bags? I can only assume that they have an insane carbon footprint, but they remove the debate of "single use" bags as well.
    2. What about all the bags that have already been manufactured after the ban? Do these get sold outside of state to a highest bidder? In that case, who would want to buy single use plastic bags considering the bans that are appearing all over the world
    3. Is a 7 cent tax really efficient to make any major changes? I know currently the bags have been free so it's still more than nothing, but in contrast, Sweden for example has decided to raise the cost of single use plastic bags from like 20-30 cents to 1-2 dollars (!) per bag. The price for paper bags will remain the same. And trust me, you'd have to be legit insane to buy single use bags for a dollar or two.
    4. Couldn't one efficient way of tackling all these plastic bags be to introduce a recycling fee for turning them in somewhere? I have like 30 of these under my sink and if there was an incentive to drop them off somewhere and get a few cents/dimes per bag so they could be recycled in specific bag-recycling machines, I for sure would do it. Like what else am I supposed to do, throw them out? Use them and THEN throw them out?
    I have more questions but this is just off the top of my head. Does anyone have any answers?

  • @rosies.2414
    @rosies.2414 Před 4 lety

    Ok chicago did take out plastic bags but not the suburbs so when I move to a suburb and still used my cloth bags people looked at me all crazy . I think it should just be all of Illinois. That would be nice. It's not that hard to keep a bag on your keys .

  • @Aniketbabar
    @Aniketbabar Před 3 lety

    But paper bags do not breakdown to microplastics. Use cloth bags /jute bags for shopping

  • @Manbarrican
    @Manbarrican Před 4 lety +1

    Just take a backpack everywhere and use it instead of getting bags.

  • @DaveE99
    @DaveE99 Před 3 lety

    I just vowed to be willing to walk back to my car even if I already started shopping, to get my reusable bag Incase I forgot it. My thought process was, after forgetting it 4 times I’d remember it automagically. And the process helpes me keep score.

  • @iluvdissheet
    @iluvdissheet Před 4 lety +14

    Reusable all day!!! ♻️

    • @redredred8408
      @redredred8408 Před 5 měsíci

      E we hat a beautiful caring for earth sign

  • @mohammed.mustabi5817
    @mohammed.mustabi5817 Před 4 lety +1

    I spend 100 in groceries my guy wouldn't give me a bag

  • @secretscarlet8249
    @secretscarlet8249 Před 4 lety +2

    While I admire this, there are some foodstuff that I still want to be covered in plastic. Like a takeout of soup, etc.

    • @fixieroy
      @fixieroy Před 4 lety

      Secret Scarlet they just said take out is allowed to be covered in plastic...

    • @secretscarlet8249
      @secretscarlet8249 Před 4 lety

      @@fixieroy ah. Just covering my bases, since a lot of restos I know still insist on using paper cups with soups.

    • @OwaisFazal
      @OwaisFazal Před 4 lety +1

      @@secretscarlet8249 sadly paper cups are also lined with a thin layer of plastic on the inside which helps keep the liquid in container...consequently it ends up in the ocean or landfills...

  • @Robert-ug5hx
    @Robert-ug5hx Před 10 měsíci

    I had to start buying t-handle bags since they arnt used to bag groceries anymore

  • @jenniferh.7219
    @jenniferh.7219 Před 4 lety

    I don't get it. Why dont they use a plastic bag that lasts at least on average 5 x times mor than the average plastic bag? Also, would bags be hygienic to reuse (going from someone's personal space to a business for ex a restaurant)?
    Also how do you take home take out? Take out with sauce permeates thru paper bags & paper bags rip. So is an alternative the reusable recycled bags? Is there anything keeping a person from reusing their own plastic bags bc that seems the most practical option - take what they give you & shove it in your own bag

  • @MuddinNYC
    @MuddinNYC Před 4 lety

    Every reusable bag I've bought lasted only 1-2 uses. Yes even name brand ones. In fact many store outside of Manhattan has gone back to using plastic bags simply because it's not worth it. Reusable bags seem to be able to hold 1/4 the weight of plastic bags. :(

    • @salty7056
      @salty7056 Před 4 lety

      Mo Uddin you need to look around more. Cloth and canvas bags last many years as do string bags. All can be washed in washing machines. Easy to make and repair. String and thin cloth easy to fit in pockets. Think outside the box.

    • @MuddinNYC
      @MuddinNYC Před 4 lety

      @@salty7056 I have cloth bags. Unfortunately I also have a large family so I need to buy in bulk which I can't do since they are simply weaker. I ended up just making multiple trips on the bus and wasting gas as a result. Kind of undoes the benefits to the environment not to mention the extra fare on the buses I need to pay now.

  • @zz449944
    @zz449944 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for mentioning that paper bags have their own environmental impacts. For one, they do not just appear by magic -- trees must be cut down and harvested and moved to the paper mills (lotsa diesel fuel use), then the trees must be processed to make the paper bags (lots of diesel, electricity, and water use, plus huge inputs of chemicals), next is transportation of the paper bags. I have read where it takes SEVEN truckloads of paper bags to equal the equivalent number of plastic bags that fit into ONE truckload.
    Banning single-use plastic shopping bags is a good thing, I guess. Small, incremental steps towards using less plastic overall in our lives.
    Consider that 95 percent of the products in grocery stores are encased in plastic. Even paperboard boxes usually have thin plastic films applied after they are printed and packaging that looks like metal foil is actually plastic made to look like foil. And even if the outer package is not plastic, the inner packaging material IS plastic. A trip to the grocery store results in soo much plastic waste after the food is removed that is sometimes seems that we are buying almost as much packaging as food.
    Manufacturers of all kinds of products have fully embraced plastic packaging over all other options. Reams of office paper come wrapped in plastic instead of paper -- so even paper manufacturers are buying plastic packaging instead of making the packaging themselves out of their own paper. Even the beloved Hershey chocolate bar is plastic wrapped now, after about 100 years being packaged in foil and paper.
    So, unless and until we can get product manufacturers to use less plastics in their packaging, simply banning the carry-out bag doesn't reduce the amount of plastic the typical consumer generates just by buying stuff. It is good that there are some alternatives appearing like shampoo bars that eliminate the plastic bottle, but for every consumer who switches to the shampoo bar there is another customer who just switched from bar soap to liquid shower soap in a plastic bottle. Awareness by consumers about what they are buying is lacking all over the world and until that awareness happens, product manufacturers are going to continue to provide their products in plastic packaging instead of viable alternatives.

    • @mdaneke4317
      @mdaneke4317 Před 2 lety

      When they cut trees down they are replanted. If the pipeline was approved we would be burning less diesel to transport it but the one from Russia to Germany was great. Worst President in history.

  • @stephylynnpatch
    @stephylynnpatch Před 4 lety +1

    What about hemp bags?

  • @Klymenthis
    @Klymenthis Před 4 lety

    Can you buy compostable plant based garbage bags in the US? And can you do soft plastic recycling? Like the scrunchable thin packaging plastic like dry cleaning bags and ziploc bags

    • @emilylau4708
      @emilylau4708 Před 4 lety +1

      Klymenthis typically residents have to rely on recycling facilities outside of their normal city recycling for soft plastic. Most grocery stores have stations for people to drop of their plastic bags for recycling, but there seems to be no accountability in ensuring that these bags actually get recycled by the company.
      Compostable bags are fairly new here and hard to find in store so most people still use basic plastic bags.

    • @Klymenthis
      @Klymenthis Před 4 lety

      Emily Lau agreed these things take time and infrastructure but once those are in place it becomes second nature just like composting and other recycling. Hopefully as plastic bag bans roll out these will come next!

  • @adventurelife_
    @adventurelife_ Před rokem +2

    Let's make the reusable bags out of good materials like hemp or cotton or old clothes

    • @m.taylor
      @m.taylor Před rokem +1

      I agree, if they are made from natural fabrics such as hemp, jute or burlap, they are compostable.

  • @Meinvt
    @Meinvt Před 4 lety +3

    I don’t think the alternative to plastic bags should be paper bags, and be presented as paper bags, it is still the disposable mentality. When the “experts” talk about the costs that shouldn’t be their go to alternative scenario. At least they don’t get stuck in trees and hang there for years. Good for NYC for realizing this.

  • @michaeldeadwyler4034
    @michaeldeadwyler4034 Před rokem +1

    We just need a better waste system. I'm not lazy, I throw everything where it needs to go. How it ends up in Thea ocean? Sounds like a government problem.

  • @sithisrants4154
    @sithisrants4154 Před rokem

    We really just need to create more synthetic plastic alternatives. There are some compostable and water-resistant substances that are similar to plastic in applications. The only thing stifling progress is policy-makers trying to save a buck on packaging