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The journey of plastic bags

In the early 70s, there were only a handful of grocery stores that send a shopper home with plastic bags. Over the years, the use of plastic bags rose exponentially. It is estimated that approximately  100 billion plastic bags  are being used annually. How did this versatile yet harmful plastic bag enter the market?

The journey of plastic bags

The first plastic bags were designed by a Swedish company known as Celloplast. They created a tube of plastic that was sealed at the bottom, open at the top and had handles for transportation. These plastic bags came to be known as “T-shirt plastic bags”. Towards the late 1970s, few grocery stores started using these T-shirt plastic bags. By 1982, these bags became quite popular as two of the biggest supermarket chains in the country (Kroger and Safeway) gave out plastic bags instead of plastic bags to their customers. In 1985, nearly 75% of the grocery stores in the US started using paper as well as plastic bags.

The popularity of plastic bags increased among businesses mainly due to their low cost when compared to paper bags. The cost of paper bags is four times more than that of plastic bags. Plastic bags are waterproof and stronger than paper bags. This also worked in favor of plastic bags. All these made business sense from the cost perspective when it came to choosing between a paper bag and a plastic bag.

However, over the years, the increasing use of plastic bags and their inefficient disposal lead to the accumulation of this nonbiodegradable material in the North Pacific Ocean. In 1997, the Great Pacific Garbage Patch was discovered. This brought to limelight the environmental hazards of using plastic bags. Citizens, as well as environmental activists, started advocating against the use of plastic bags.

In March 2007, San Francisco became the first city in the country to ban the use of non-biodegradable plastic bags. The state prohibited drug stores, supermarkets, and large retail stores from using non-biodegradable plastic bags. Then states such as California and Rhode Island put systems in place for supermarkets and grocers to recycle plastic bags. According to a research, only about 5.2% of the non-biodegradable plastic bags in the municipal waste stream were recycled in 2005.

After San Francisco, nearly 132 counties and cities across 18 states and also District of Columbia issued a similar legislation. Then nearly a decade later, in 2014, California issued a statewide ban on plastic shopping bags. According to this order, large grocery stores, food retailers, pharmacies, convenience markets, small food retailers, and liquor stores were not allowed to use plastic shopping bags. Also, Hawaii has a de-facto state-wise ban on plastic bags. Other states have passed legislation that allows local government bodies to either ban or impose any fees/taxes on the use of plastic bags.

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