Wokingham Today

‘Sales of plastic bags down 95%’ claims the Government

- plasticfre­ehome Dave Lamont facebook.com/PlasticFre­eHomeUK

CONFIRMING that the cost of a carrier bag in England will double to 10p from April next year, the Government also said that sales of carrier bags have fallen by 95% since the 2015 introducti­on of the ‘plastic bag tax’.

The compulsory charge currently only applies to retailers with more than 250 full-time employees but from next year it will apply to all shops.

In all, 226 million ‘single use’ plastic carrier bags were sold by larger retailers in the past year. The total number sold, when all retailers are included, may be several times that.

Is the Government’s claim true?

An excellent piece of journalism by Channel 4 News last year highlighte­d that the Government’s figures only relate to single use plastic bags and not so-called bags for life, which have of course become the new normal in most supermarke­ts.

In 2019, Channel 4 News asked the leading supermarke­ts mentioned above for more comprehens­ive numbers, to better understand the progress that had been made.

Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Asda and Morrisons all declined to provide data, but Waitrose, the Co-op and Marks & Spencer all responded.

Tesco reportedly said that it was not legally obliged to share this informatio­n, while Sainsbury’s cited commercial sensitivit­y.

Channel 4 News found that collective­ly Waitrose, Co-Op and M&S sold 58.8 million bags for life in 2018-19, a mere 2% annual decrease.

It pointed out that two years prior, all supermarke­ts published data, which triggered unwanted negative publicity, hence their reticence at the time of asking.

In 2019, the Environmen­tal Investigat­ions Agency (EIA) showed that Tesco sold 430 million bags for life,

40% more than Sainsbury’s figure of

269 million, with the other supermarke­ts reporting lower sales.

The problem with bags for life

It goes without saying that bags for life are stronger than convention­al plastic carrier bags. This is because they contain far more plastic.

Findings place the ‘life’ of an average carrier bag (be it ‘single use’ or ‘reusable’) at somewhere between 10 and 20 minutes before they are then discarded, and potentiall­y headed for landfill, or worse the ocean.

Research has suggested that a bag for life needs to be used at least 12 times before it can hope to be better for our planet than its ‘single use’ cousin. Sadly most do not achieve close to that.

The Marine Conservati­on Associatio­n’s Dr Laura Foster has previously criticised brands like Sainsbury’s for only offering bags for life – they did away with single use bags entirely – because: “people are using them effectivel­y as single use bags” and “they contain much more plastic.”

Dr Foster believes that retailers should be incentivis­ing customers to bring their bags back by charging much more for them – upwards of 60p.

A 2018 Times article, ‘Scourge of more than 1bn plastic bags for life’, suggested that the average UK household was using 44 bags for life in a year and argued that: “many customers treat them as single-use carriers, discarding them and buying new ones on their next shopping trip.”

The managing director of Iceland, Richard Walker, said last year: “We are selling less of them [single use carrier bags] but it’s not yet less enough that it’s compensate­d in terms of the extra weight that they are for the fewer amount of bags that we are selling. So I haven’t yet reduced the total amount of plastic weight.”

Pretty damning.

According to Channel 4 News’ item, nearly one-in-three bags sold in 2019 was a bag for life, with no evidence of a fall in their use, while the available evidence suggested that “the introducti­on of bags for life might have actually increased the overall amount of plastic being used.”

The Government’s figures seemingly do not provide a full or accurate picture of things.

The use of ‘single use’ plastic carrier bags does indeed continue to fall, helped no doubt by the fact that a growing number of supermarke­ts do not provide them as an option.

They have largely been replaced by bags for life, yet these contain far more plastic and are heavier and bulkier to ship, resulting in more packaging and a higher amount of fossil fuels being consumed. And their usage isn’t falling very much if at all.

Plastic bags for life need to be used at least a dozen times to be a better alternativ­e environmen­tally, yet the lifespan of the average carrier bag in the UK is under 20 minutes meaning that this will rarely be the case.

Also, the Government’s figures relate only to the seven supermarke­ts highlighte­d above. The true picture, when looking at the retail sector as a whole, is much harder to gauge.

What is the solution? We suggest that most of us have more than enough bags at home, whatever they are made from (jute, juco, cotton, plastic, or indeed reusable or cardboard boxes…), to last for many years. We should be using them, to death, and shops should stop readily supplying bags of any kind.

That is how we bring about real and lasting change and stop this issue becoming yet another political football.

 ??  ?? For more tips and advice, join the online group at www.facebook.com/ plasticfre­ehomeuk Got a comment or question? Email plasticfre­ehome@gmail.com
For more tips and advice, join the online group at www.facebook.com/ plasticfre­ehomeuk Got a comment or question? Email plasticfre­ehome@gmail.com
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