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10 Questions You Should to Know about Plastic Roll Bags

Feb. 24, 2025

10 Facts About Single-use Plastic Bags

The Problem With Plastic Bags

Plastic bags start out as fossil fuels and end up as deadly waste in landfills and the ocean. Birds often mistake shredded plastic bags for food, filling their stomachs with toxic debris. For hungry sea turtles, it's nearly impossible to distinguish between jellyfish and floating plastic shopping bags. Fish eat thousands of tons of plastic a year, transferring it up the food chain to bigger fish and marine mammals. Microplastics are also consumed by people through food and in the air. It's estimated that globally, people consume the equivalent of a credit card of plastic every week,1 and it's expected that there will be more plastic than fish in the sea by .2

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The fossil fuel industry plans to increase plastic production by 40% over the next decade. These oil giants are rapidly building petrochemical plants across the United States to turn fracked gas into plastic. This means more plastic in our oceans, more greenhouse gas emissions and more toxic air pollution, which exacerbates the climate crisis that often disproportionately affects communities of color.

10 Facts About Single-Use Plastic Bags

  1. The world uses 5 trillion plastic bags a year.3
  2. Americans use an average of 365 plastic bags per person per year. People in Denmark use an average of four plastic bags per year.4
  3. It only takes about 14 plastic bags for the equivalent of the gas required to drive one mile.5
  4. In about 730,000 tons of plastic bags, sacks and wraps were generated (including PS, PP, HDPE, PVC & LDPE) in the United States, but more than 87% of those items are never recycled, winding up in landfills and the ocean.6
  5. About 34% of dead leatherback sea turtles have ingested plastics.7
  6. The plastic typically used in bottles, bags and food containers contains chemical additives such as endocrine disruptors, which are associated with negative health effects including cancers, birth defects and immune system suppression in humans and wildlife.8
  7. It takes 1,000 years for a plastic bag to degrade in a landfill. Unfortunately, the bags don't break down completely but instead photo-degrade, becoming microplastics that absorb toxins and continue to pollute the environment.9
  8. Chemical leachates from plastic bags impair the growth of the world's most important microorganisms, Prochlorococcus, a marine bacterium that provides one tenth of the world's oxygen.10
  9. There were 1.9 million grocery bags and other plastic bags collected in the International Coastal Cleanup.11
  10. In California became the first state to ban plastic bags. As of March , 311 local bag ordinances have been adopted in 24 states, including Hawaii.12 As of July , 127 countries have adopted some form of legislation to regulate plastic bags.13

Ways You Can Help

  1. Support the Break Free From Plastic Pollution Act, which would phase out throwaway plastics, hold the industry responsible for its waste and pause construction on new plastic-making plants. Ask your members of Congress to cosponsor this crucial bill aimed at tackling the plastic pollution crisis head on.
  2. Practice waste prevention first and choose to reuse whenever possible. Make sure to always bring a reusable bag when shopping. By regularly washing your bags and drying them thoroughly, you can reuse them over and over.14
  3. One company, Formosa Plastics, is trying to build a mega-polluting petrochemical plant in Louisiana that would harm a Black community, degrade wetlands, and deepen the plastic pollution crisis. Sign the petition asking President Biden to revoke Formosa Plastics' federal permit, which is currently suspended and under reevaluation by the Army Corps of Engineers.
  4. President Biden can address the plastic pollution crisis rapidly through executive action. Demand that he take bold action on plastics for our health, climate and wildlife.

How to store plastic bags for easy access?

You're smart to figure out a way that works for you to store & access your used bags. Without that they're not nearly as re-usable!

We use these strategies to cut through the clutter & make our bags more manageable:

Bring as few home as possible We keep reusable shopping & produce bags in a front closet so it's easy to grab on the way to the store. We keep 2-3 bags in each car for errands on the way home. Foldable or net bags can even fit in a tote bag, backpack or briefcase.

If you want to learn more, please visit our website Plastic Roll Bags.

Store where you use them An example of this is a bunch of bags used as trash can liners stored under the in-use bag.

Group like with like For example, fold & stack paper grocery bags & slide the stack inside one of the paper bags. When the "holder" looks like what's inside it's easier to know where to go to get what you need.

Group by function We bring all our food bags to one drawer, rolled & stored in emptied boxes of that type (marked for re-use) or in marked tubes.

Bundle the bulk When any type of bag overflows its storage we put the overflow into a like bag & store in a holding area (top of a closet near our refuse station). When the current store is used up we bring out the bundle & put those bags in current use areas.

Share the wealth! If we have a lot we'll likely take a long time to use we find someone who needs a whole bunch & pass them on. Good candidates for that are farmers (need lots of produce bags & other small bags like newspaper bags); Small businesses (need shopping bags); School & volunteer groups (lots of different needs- check with your faves!). Local Freecycle and ReuseIt Groups are easy ways to find a taker.

Contact us to discuss your requirements of Biodegradable Forks and Knives. Our experienced sales team can help you identify the options that best suit your needs.

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