I have an embarrassing confession to make. I have used plastic grocery bags in the last 30 days.
As a director of the local environmental group Heal the Bay, part of my job is to educate everyone about the ecological and economic harm caused by single-use shopping bags. I craft message points urging people to give up disposable bags in favor of reusable totes. Yet there I was, skulking out of my neighborhood market during Thanksgiving weekend with two enormous handfuls of plastic, praying that no one who knew me would catch me red-handed in the parking lot.
For the record, I had my wife's car, and she doesn't carry reusable bags. At the checkout stand, I was distracted by mediating a wrestling match between my rambunctious sons and missed my chance to request paper bags.
My relapse illustrates the challenges environmental groups face in moving beyond honed policy statements to change everyday behavior. Shoppers may comprehend rationally the need to alter their consumption habits, but the siren call of "convenience" and the pressures of daily life -- unruly kids and all -- conspire against the best intentions.
You probably know the arguments. According to county statistics, L.A. uses more than 6 billion one-time plastic bags a year, with only 5% of that total being recycled. The rest become a costly public waste problem that hogs precious landfill. The bags haunt our public spaces like ghosts, blowing across roadways, parks and schoolyards. The non-degrading bags choke streams and oceans, threatening marine life.
Disposable bags pose economic problems as well. San Francisco figured the cost of collecting and disposing the bags dispensed there at 17 cents a bag. One maker of reusable bags calculates that you could drive one mile on the petroleum required to make 14 bags; in the U.S., it's estimated we consume about 100 billion bags a year.
OK, what about paper bags instead? They're made from farmed trees, they degrade and they don't enter the litter stream as readily as plastic grocery bags, but they are still not recycled in great numbers, and they require large amounts of fossil fuels and water to produce and distribute.
Biodegradable plastic bags made of soy and corn byproducts are more environmentally friendly, but they cost retailers more than plastic bags, and although they can be composted out of existence by users, most of us aren't composters. They also don't break down in the marine environment, which lacks the necessary heat and bacteria to initiate degradation.