Plastic bag: Paper Or Plastic Or Both

May 23rd, 2011 by aplasticbag

plastic bags

We have come to make a variety of uses for the ever familiar plastic bag: carrying groceries from the car to the kitchen, lining waste baskets in the kitchen, throwing wet swimsuits in them after a day at the beach, kids’ science projects, padding for fragile items when moving, the list goes on. This conscientious reusing of plastic bags, as opposed to tossing them in the trash after a visit to the supermarket, is an important component of recycling. While the plastic bag’s actual material isn’t being physically broken down and reconstituted to another product (bottle, cell phone part, vehicle upholstery, or another plastic bag), using a bag again, and again means not using up a new bag which adds up in the long run.

Combining the practice of reusing with seeking out recyclable plastic bags for everyday applications can make a significant difference in the environmental footprint our industrial and commercial production leaves for future generations to come. As with finances, the saying that we are borrowing from our children is also true with regards to out environment. Lessons can be gleaned from the kind of culture and lifestyle of Native Americans in North America during the 18th and 19th centuries. These people adapted to the environment and practiced a form of reusing that reflected the spirit of conservation and frugality. These peoples in general wasted very little, if anything at all, in their daily livelihood with settling, traveling, cooking, and hunting practices that differed immensely from Western pioneers who arrived on the scene with all manner of sophisticated weaponry and transportation.

Though they didn’t use plastic bags, if they did, Native Americans would have probably figured out a way to melt old plastic bags (after years of use) and make new ones using techniques they would have developed over time using the materials available to them from the both their environment and the animals they captured. It could be argued that Native Americans lived a comparatively more conscientious lifestyle than our own to accommodate an existence on very sparse resources, and that it was completely out of necessity that they lived the way they did. Be that as it may, it would be difficult to hold something against parsimonious living, after all, being wasteful is generally discouraged by most. With the advent of newer technology and better production methods, standard and custom plastic bags continue to develop and improve over time with regards to usage, physical composition, disposal, and recycling. For additional information on plastic bags and their usage, visit www.aplasticbag.com to learn more.

Plastic Bag

August 20th, 2009 by aplasticbag

Recyclable plastic bagsA plastic bag has become a household name today. Plastic bags are being used by almost every industry at different stages of their production- like packaging, advertising, brand promotions etc. These bags come in various designs, quality, models, sizes, and prices. Generally, plastic bags are durable, reusable, and have elasticity also. The manufacturers often strive to produce long lasting and good quality plastic bags that can be used for multi purposes like advertising products. The bags are passed through various quality checks to make them leak proof and strong once they move out of the manufacturing plants.

As these bags come in different styles, they have different price and quality. A normal plastic bag used for grocery purposes would not cost much, is often produced in bulk, and would not be able to sustain fruits and vegetables for long. These bags also come in various sizes and shapes depending upon the consumers needs. Another variety of plastic bags is garbage bag that is also produced in bulk since they are used daily. These bags come in small, large, and extra large sizes for specific needs.

There is a lot of innovation going on to make the plastic bags user friendly, cost effective, and attractive. The manufactures are placing handles, putting zippers, and even going one step further by making recyclable plastic bags. These recyclable plastic bags or green plastic bags are biodegradable, environment friendly, and can store perishable things for a longer time. These are reusable, odorless, and recommended by environmentalists across the world to curtail environmental damage caused by normal plastic bags.

The main drawback of plastic is its non-biodegradability that means it does not degrade once buried in the earth. On the other hand, the recyclable plastic bags do not cause much damage to the soil and environment. Though these bags are priced higher marginally, they have become popular with the general people and environmentalists alike.

Going Green with Your Shopping Bags

August 18th, 2009 by aplasticbag

Trade show bagsHow many of those grocery plastic bags do you have lying around your house? How many more do you think there are lying in the landfills around the world? Sure some of the green plastic bags are made of a recycled material and you can reuse them around the house but there is a better way of carrying those shopping purchases home- reusable grocery totes. With today’s concern about the environment, grocery stores and retails stores are offering reusable grocery totes. These tote bags are made of recyclable materials and are a great way to “go green.”

You can get these reusable canvas totes at online, at a trade show bags event or your local grocery or retail store. No more paper or custom printed poly bags at the grocery store to throw away when you get home!

Plastic Bags

August 18th, 2009 by aplasticbag

recyclable plastic bagsA plastic bag is a multi-utility bag that is made of polyethylene. Plastic bags have become a part of the daily lives of millions of people across the globe with their varied usage. They are commonly used to carry items, wrap food, store wet or dirty clothes, or as trash bags etc. The key features of a plastic bag are its durability, strength, elasticity, and variety that can be used household, medicine, and industrial purposes.

These bags come in different shapes, colors, sizes, and transparency levels. Importantly, the price of the bags differs according to their usage. For example, a simple grocery bag used for carrying vegetables, fruits, and meat can come for a very nominal price, while a good quality food wrap can cost you some money. The household bags also include self-adhesive bags, plastic grocery bags, tote bags, zipper bags, and garbage bags. Self-sealing bags, tie-on bags, durable bags are commonly used for industrial purposes. The medicinal industry uses plastic bags as ice bags, static control bags, hot packs etc.

Plastic bags nowadays are used for advertising purposes also which is considered both cost-effective and elegant. Shopkeepers usually advertise the company’s name or products they sell to the customers. For this, the handles and company logos are custom-printed on the bags.

Green plastic bags and recyclable plastic bags have also gained a lot of popularity in the recent times. Green bags are a scientific breakthrough. Fruits and vegetables can be stored for longer durations and thus amounting for less wastage. These bags are usually bio-degradable that means when they break down, they do not harm the environment like a polyethylene bag does. When exposed to the sun, these bags degrade and rest of the task is done by bacteria which change the plastic into an organic matter in just half the time it takes for a polyethylene bag.

Paper or Plastic? A New Look at the Bag Scourge

June 17th, 2009 by aplasticbag

recyclable plastic bagsThe Wall Street Journal reports recently that when plastic grocery bags were introduced some 30 years ago, they were touted as light, long-lasting and cheap. They caught on so well that hundreds of billions are dispensed each year, creating a modern menace that often winds up nestled in trees, stuck in sewers and drifting in oceans.

Faced with the growing blight, countries from Ireland to China and cities from San Francisco to Washington, D.C., have moved to ban or tax their use. Recently, a United Nations official called for outlawing them world-wide. Said Achim Steiner, executive director of the U.N. Environment Program: “There is simply zero justification for manufacturing them anymore, anywhere.”

But nothing is simple in the push to protect the planet. There is growing evidence that the production, use and disposal of recyclable plastic bags put less burden on natural resources than paper bags. Meanwhile, a knock against plastic bags — that they can’t be conveniently recycled — is becoming less persuasive as more cities start accepting plastic bags in curbside recycling programs.

That makes the cash-register question — paper or plastic? — more vexing than ever. “It depends on what environmental issues you see as being more important,” says Lisa Mastny, who directs the consumption project at the Worldwatch Institute, an environmental group. “The things you can see in your daily life tend to create more of an emotional response than the things that are in the background.”

What Ms. Mastny would prefer — and what most studies agree is most beneficial to the environment — is for shoppers to bring their own reusable bags to the grocery store. A reusable bag is better for the environment regardless of what it is made from, as long as it is used at least four times, according to a 2004 study by the French retailer Carrefour.

Still, most American consumers take plastic bags for granted. Sandi Palmer, a 34-year-old hospital secretary in Preston, Idaho, figures she goes through five or 10 of them each week, which estimates say is roughly in line with the average American. She typically reuses the bags as wastebasket liners, and then throws them away. The idea of banning or charging for disposable plastic bags to encourage the use of reusable sacks is “ridiculous,” she says. “Why are they making the bag an issue?”

Some environmentally focused grocery stores, such as Whole Foods, report many of their shoppers have begun switching to reusable bags and green plastic bags, though they are still in the minority. More-mainstream grocers say relatively few of their customers use reusable bags.

Another option — the compostable plastic bag, made of substances such as corn — is no panacea, either. If it is accidentally recycled, it can contaminate the regular plastic it is recycled with. And to fully degrade, most compostable bags need to be sent to one of the relatively scarce food-waste composting facilities in the U.S.

Increasingly, cities and states seeking greener grocery stores are proposing taxes on all disposable bags. Seattle and Washington, D.C., are considering imposing fees on both paper and plastic bags. Other places, disinclined to saddle their voters with another prohibition or tax, recently have upgraded their curbside recycling programs to accommodate plastic bags.

Recycling rates for plastic bags exceed 30% in some European countries, notably Germany. But getting Americans to recycling their plastic grocery bags, even at home, takes effort.

U.S. cities that accept custom plastic bags in their recycling bins typically ask residents to stuff a lot of bags inside one bag, sausage-like, to make the bags easier for recycling workers to handle. It’s what industry insiders call a “bag of bags.”

Hello world!

June 17th, 2009 by aplasticbag

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