Which bag should you use Luka Seamus Wright and Imogen Ellen Napper

You’ve filled up your cart and made
it to the front of the grocery line

when you’re confronted
with yet another choice:

what kind of bag should you use?

If you’ve seen the images of plastic bags
strewn across the ocean,

it might seem obvious that plastic
is bad for the environment.

Surely a paper bag or a cotton tote
would be the better option.

But is that really true?

Each of these three materials
has a unique environmental impact

that’s determined by its carbon footprint,

its potential to be reused and recycled,
and its degradability.

So, to get the full story
on these grocery bags

we need to look at how they’re made,

how they’re used,
and where they ultimately go.

Let’s start with plastic.

The typical thin and flimsy plastic bag
is made of high-density polyethylene,

commonly known as HDPE.

Producing this material requires
extracting petroleum from the ground

and applying extreme heat.

The resulting polymer resin
is then transported

alongside additional ingredients
like titanium oxide and chalk

to a bag manufacturing plant.

Here, coal powered machines
melt the materials down

and spin them into sheets of plastic,

which are then folded into bags.

By the time a bag reaches
its final destination,

it’s contributed an estimated 1.6 kg
of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere.

That’s the same amount of carbon
a car produces,

driving a little over 6 kilometers.

But the alternatives actually possess
a much larger carbon footprint.

Paper is made from wood pulp,

and when you account for the carbon cost
of removing trees from their ecosystems,

a single paper bag can be responsible
for about 5.5 kg of carbon dioxide.

Meanwhile, growing cotton is an extremely
energy and water intensive process.

The production of a single cotton tote

emits an estimated 272 kg
of carbon dioxide.

When we compare carbon footprints,
plastic bags are the clear winner.

But environmental impact
is also determined by how the bag is used.

Reusing or recycling these bags

significantly offsets
their environmental toll

by reducing demand for new production.

To quantify that offset, we can divide
the bag’s carbon footprint

by the number of times it’s reused.

For example, if a typical paper bag
is reused three times,

it has a lower net impact
than a single-use plastic bag.

The carbon footprint of a cotton tote
can similarly be lowered,

if it’s reused 131 times.

Of these three options, durable cloth
totes are most likely to be reused.

Evidence shows paper bags are quickly
discarded due to their tendency to tear.

This issue plagues HDPE
plastic bags as well.

But even when they’re made
to avoid tearing,

their widespread availability makes
it easy to treat them as single-use items.

Fortunately, researchers estimate
that 40% of HDPE bags

are reused at least once
for throwing out waste.

Recycling these bags also offsets
their carbon footprint,

but it’s not universally possible
for each material.

Many countries lack the infrastructure
to efficiently recycle plastic bags.

Cotton totes are perhaps even more
difficult to breakdown and process,

but since they’re often reused
for long periods,

they’re still least likely
to end up in landfills.

Whenever these bags aren’t recycled,

the third factor in calculating
environmental impact comes into play:

degradability.

Since HDPE bags are heat-resistant
and insoluble,

they stick around long after we’re done
with them.

Partially broken down plastic
can circulate in ecosystems for centuries.

Cotton on the other hand degrades
substantially in a matter of months,

and paper bags break down
completely in just 90 days.

So, which bag should you use?

It turns out the most
environmentally friendly bags

have features of several materials
we’ve discussed.

They’re durable and reusable, like cotton,
but made of plastic,

which has a lower carbon footprint
than cotton or paper.

These sturdy shopping bags consist of
polyester, vinyl and other tough plastics,

and are already used worldwide.

Most importantly,
they should last a lifetime—

making them the best option
for the planet, and your groceries.

当您面临另一个选择时,您已经装满了购物车
并走到了杂货店的前面

您应该使用哪种袋子?

如果您看过
散布在海洋中的塑料袋的图像,

很明显
塑料对环境有害。

当然,纸袋或棉质手提包
会是更好的选择。

但这是真的吗?

这三种材料
中的每一种都具有独特的环境影响

,这取决于其碳足迹、

可重复使用和回收的潜力
以及可降解性。

因此,要
了解这些购物袋的完整故事,

我们需要了解它们是如何制作的、

如何使用的
以及它们最终的去向。

让我们从塑料开始。

典型的薄而脆弱的
塑料袋由高密度聚乙烯制成,

通常称为HDPE。

生产这种材料需要
从地下提取石油

并施加极热。

然后将所得聚合物树脂


氧化钛和白垩等其他成分一起运输

到袋子制造厂。

在这里,燃煤机器
将材料熔化

并将它们旋转成塑料片

,然后将其折叠成袋子。

当一个袋子
到达最终目的地时,

它向大气中贡献了大约 1.6 公斤
的二氧化碳。

这与汽车产生的碳量相同

行驶 6 公里多一点。

但替代品实际上
拥有更大的碳足迹。

纸是由木浆制成的

,如果考虑
到将树木从其生态系统中移除的碳成本,

一个纸袋可
产生约 5.5 公斤的二氧化碳。

同时,种植棉花是一个非常
耗能和耗水的过程。

生产一个棉质手提包

估计会排放 272 公斤
的二氧化碳。

当我们比较碳足迹时,
塑料袋是明显的赢家。

但环境
影响也取决于袋子的使用方式。 通过减少对新产品的需求,

重复使用或回收这些袋子可以

显着抵消
它们对环境造成

的影响。

为了量化这种抵消,我们可以
将袋子的碳足迹

除以它的重复使用次数。

例如,如果一个典型的
纸袋重复使用 3 次,

它的净影响
低于一次性塑料袋。

如果重复使用 131 次,同样可以降低棉质手提包的碳足迹。

在这三个选项中,耐用的布质
手提袋最有可能被重复使用。

有证据表明,纸袋
由于容易撕裂而很快被丢弃。

这个问题也困扰着 HDPE
塑料袋。

但即使它们是
为了避免撕裂,

它们的广泛可用性也使得
它们很容易被视为一次性物品。

幸运的是,研究人员
估计 40% 的 HDPE 袋子

至少会重复使用一次
以丢弃垃圾。

回收这些袋子也可以抵消
它们的碳足迹,

但并非
对每种材料都普遍可行。

许多国家缺乏
有效回收塑料袋的基础设施。

棉质手提袋可能
更难分解和加工,

但由于它们经常被
长时间重复使用,

它们
最终被填埋的可能性仍然最小。

每当这些袋子不被回收时,

计算环境影响的第三个因素
就会发挥作用:

可降解性。

由于 HDPE 袋具有耐热性
和不溶性,

因此在我们使用完之后很长时间它们仍然存在

部分分解的塑料
可以在生态系统中循环几个世纪。

另一方面,棉花
在几个月内就会大幅降解

,纸袋
在短短 90 天内就完全分解。

那么,你应该使用哪个包?

事实证明,最
环保的袋子

具有我们讨论过的几种材料的特性

它们像棉花一样耐用且可重复使用,
但由塑料制成,

其碳足迹
低于棉花或纸。

这些坚固的购物袋由
聚酯、乙烯基和其他坚韧的塑料制成

,已在全球范围内使用。

最重要的是,
它们应该持续一生——

使它们
成为地球和您的食品杂货的最佳选择。