Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Get the Word Out




Dear Friends of our planet (I hope I can call you friends):

Below is a letter I have sent to the corporate headquarters of our local supermarket chain. I am also working on one for the mayor and the governor’s office, and my state senators and representatives. It wasn’t hard to do. I got the template from ReusableBags.com. They have done all the work for you. Just go to this site http://www.reusablebags.com/action.php and download either the government letter or the grocery store letter and make it personal. Do we need this? Just read the other stories on this blog, and catch the new pictures from Senegal, courtesy of my friend Helene. It is this way all over the world. Time to act on something, and plastic bags is a good piece to start with. Mary Jo

Letter:
Dear Schnucks:

As a concerned regular customer at Sarah-Lindell, I am writing to ask you to join in with other leading retailers including Ikea, Costco and Whole Foods by either 1) offering a $.05 or $.10 credit per bag for customer that chose to bring their own and/or 2) introducing a small fee of .15 cents per disposable, single-use plastic bag. This will both save you money and help establish the Schnucks name as a responsible retailer that cares about our environment.

Introduced 25 years ago, single use plastic bags are now consumed at an astounding rate of approximately 500 billion per year globally, or 1 million per minute. It is estimated that 1% or 5 billion of these bags end up as wind blow litter each year. These bags that take up to 1,000 years to biodegrade, often wind up in waterways or the landscape, becoming eyesores and eventually degrading water and soil as they break down into tiny toxic bits.

Their manufacture and disposal also uses large quantities of non-renewable resources, especially petroleum, a key ingredient in plastic. Large amounts of global warming gases are released during their production, transportation, and disposal. Environmentally, disposable plastic bags are a serious problem. Hundreds of thousands of marine animals, including endangered sea turtles, die every year when they eat plastic bags mistaken for food. Paper bags are not the answer, since independent studies show they have roughly as many negative impacts as plastic ones.

The negative impacts of disposable bags could be reduced easily and significantly by charging for their usage at the point of purchase. In cooperation with retailers, the Irish government introduced a plastic bag tax (PlasTax) last year that has slashed consumption over 90% and raised $9.6 million for environmental and waste management projects. Another benefit is that stores save money on bag purchases and improve their public image. For example, Superquinn, one of the largest Irish grocery chains, says the number of bags it distributes for free has dropped by 97.5%.

Charging for disposable bags and rewarding the use of reusable bags is a win-win solution to the disposable bag problem. It helps create the foundation for public-private partnership consumer in solving environmental problems, and saves retailers money.

Thank you for your careful thought on this matter, and I hope, the introduction of a store policy to charge for disposable bags and give credit for reusable ones. Corporate responsibility like this can make the difference between keeping and losing customers.

Sincerely,


Mary Jo Blackwood
St. Louis, MO 63112

Sunday, February 10, 2008

Affluence = Waste = Trash


Visiting villages and towns in Burkina Faso, Mali, and Senegal, I was struck by the affluence/trash link. The more remote the village, usually the less the trash because they make their own utensils out of wood, calabash gourds, and earthenware. They use everything.

The more contact a village has with markets, the more trash they accumulate, and there is no trash disposal. Cheap black plastic bags and other waste ends up along the road, or in makeshift pits out of which clay from bricks has been cut. Grazing animals eat it and become sickened. Children play in potentially hazardous waste, and the pristine nature of the countryside is eroded. While we can pack all our trash out to appropriate disposal, how do we change what’s happening in developing countries? It’s not like we can tell them to put it in a wastebasket or something. The only chance to deal with it is to stop it at the source, and pressure manufacturers to make only biodegradable products. The garbage man is NOT coming this week!