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01-07-2018, 07:38 PM | #1 | ||
HUGH JARSE
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I have a simple query.
Can someone tell me, using logical argument, why govmints ban single use plastic bags and what is the desired outcome they are trying to achieve? |
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01-07-2018, 07:43 PM | #2 | ||
Moderator
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Too many single use plastic bags are ending up in our oceans and killing marine life.
However, I feel there is a more hidden motive behind it. |
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01-07-2018, 07:52 PM | #4 | ||
Regular Member
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so there you go
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01-07-2018, 07:56 PM | #5 | |||
IT Drone from Sector 7G
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Quote:
These were found in a dead whale's stomach. The whale was washed up on a beach, they didn't harpoon it just to dissect it. Plastic and micro-plastics in the marine environment are bad for everyone and everything, especially those animals that ingest them thinking they're food, and then those animals that eat those animals, and then the humans that eat those. |
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01-07-2018, 08:01 PM | #6 | ||
IT Drone from Sector 7G
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Yeah aliens want us to lock away all our remaining petrochemicals in plastic so it makes it easy for them to take away with them next time they visit
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01-07-2018, 08:01 PM | #7 | ||
Donating Member
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Saw a huge billboard sign the other day
"Is this the end of plastic bags , or the start of charging for them ? " |
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01-07-2018, 08:02 PM | #8 | ||
FG XR6 Ute & Sedan
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https://www.der.wa.gov.au/your-envir...lastic-bag-ban I think there should also be a ban on taking them to sea as that where the biggest risk is and people used them as bait bags etc and even without those few idiots that intentionally throw them overboard they are too easily accidentally blow overboard. The look too much like jellyfish that turtles and other threatened marine species eat.
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regards Blue Last edited by aussiblue; 01-07-2018 at 08:08 PM. |
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01-07-2018, 08:08 PM | #9 | ||
GT-P With An Ego
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it's a hollow environmental ploy.
Not saying it's not good to get rid of plastic bags, but there's bigger problems, but they cost money to fix and are hard. banning bags doesn't cost the government anything, makes it look like they're doing something, while not really doing anything at all. And it replaces lightweight biodegradable bags with heavy weight bags that end up in the trash anyway, and the supermarkets can make some extra money on them. It's win for the supermarkets, lose of the environment.
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01-07-2018, 08:25 PM | #10 | |||
HUGH JARSE
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Quote:
If what you say is correct then we should ban ALL plastic bags. So why is the ban limited to single use bags? Sent from my SM-G960F using Tapatalk |
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01-07-2018, 08:27 PM | #11 | |||
HUGH JARSE
Join Date: May 2005
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Nice pics mate, but I fail to see single use bags on them
Are you in favour of banning all plastic bags to save whales from dying? Quote:
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01-07-2018, 08:30 PM | #12 | |||
HUGH JARSE
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Quote:
Sent from my SM-G960F using Tapatalk |
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01-07-2018, 08:49 PM | #13 | ||
Thailand Specials
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Is it from Government or is it from Coles and Safeway? (Its still Safeway to me I don't care for this 'woolworths' nonsense!)
If its just Coles and Safeway then I just won't shop there because I'm not interested in making my shopping experience inconvenient - I don't want to carry bags around in my car and have to bring them to the store. |
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01-07-2018, 09:05 PM | #14 | |||
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BUT we have to start somewhere to stop this plastic pollution. It is estimated that 10% of all the plastic bags that have ever been produced are now in or lying at the bottom of our oceans. An astonishing 32% of the 78 million tons of plastic packaging produced makes its way into the ocean every year. If you take your own multiple-use plastic bags to the supermarket just once a week to carry your shopping, then they are at least used 52 times per year. There is no question that single-use plastic bags, plastic straws, bottles and cups etc, are worst than multiple use items and contribute a greater percentage of plastic waste in our oceans. The world belongs to the company or person who can invent a replacement for plastic shopping bags and other single-use items that are not harmful to our marine life and is biodegradable, and cost-effective as plastic to manufacture. (Paper bags simply don't have the strength). Invent this... And you will be one of the World's richest men. |
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01-07-2018, 09:08 PM | #15 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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I heard the 'enviro' bags have to be used 150 times before they break even on the benefits to the environment.
As for the reusable plastic bags, they are thicker and larger than a regular plastic bags. I wonder how many times they have to be used before being better than a regular plastic bag? Also surely everyone else has that place in their house where hundreds of plastic bags are stashed for future use? Mine is the bottom shelf in my pantry. Quote:
I'd like to see companies start cutting back excessive packaging. Last edited by Ben73; 01-07-2018 at 09:14 PM. |
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01-07-2018, 09:10 PM | #16 | |||
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Coles and Safeway just elected to start the ban earlier. You don't need to carry your own muliple use bags in your car... You can elect to buy them each time from the supermarket at check out, although that gets expensive. |
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01-07-2018, 09:19 PM | #17 | ||
\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/
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Lets ban plastic bags and replace them with plastic bags. Sounds like a great idea to me.
I don't know about the rest of you but we reuse the 'single' use bags at home as garbage bags. I guess we will just need to buy more single use garbage bags now. The early adoption of this by the major supermarkets (in NSW) is just an easy way to pass the cost on to the consumer. |
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01-07-2018, 09:37 PM | #18 | ||
FG XR6 Ute & Sedan
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I agree it would be better to ban all plastic bags o back to good old biodegradable brown paper bags made from recycled paper; all plastic bags pose an environmental pollution risk. I spent a lot of time at sea on commercial fishing boats in the last 20 years of my working life and I have to say plastic bags of all types together with "Japanese sea boots" (thongs) were one of the most common forms of rubbish seen at sea.
Edit: I forgot the cigarette butts: https://www.care2.com/causes/10-most...ean-trash.html
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01-07-2018, 09:39 PM | #19 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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For mine, the overuse of plastic packaging is far worse than the single use bags which get a second use in wrapping the rubbish for the bin.
Why does half the fruit and vegies have to be packed in a plastic base and then wrapped with cling wrap? There's so much single serve stuff packed then repacked into another container holding 10 or a dozen of them. Do they think people can't measure out of a tin or a box if they want a single serve? This 'value adding' is killing everything. |
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01-07-2018, 09:58 PM | #20 | |||
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I had dinner at the local club the other night and noticed they’ve replaced the plastic drinking straws with thick cardboard straws.
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01-07-2018, 10:08 PM | #21 | ||||||
FG XR6 Ute & Sedan
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regards Blue Last edited by aussiblue; 01-07-2018 at 10:21 PM. |
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01-07-2018, 10:14 PM | #22 | |||
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01-07-2018, 10:30 PM | #23 | ||
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You should see the amount of plastic wrapping and packaging we use at work everyday.
There is a bigger problem to be solved. Banning something without offering a viable alternative doesn't sit right with me, even if it is meant to be for the "Greater Good." |
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01-07-2018, 10:38 PM | #24 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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I can easily understand why cigarette butts are the most common forms of litter in the oceans,as well as every where else. Cigarette smokers are by and large lazy B,s who find it too hard to even walk to a rubbish bin,so it can at least go into landfill.How often do you see a smoker drop the butt or flick it into the gutter,even if a bin is only a metre or two away
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01-07-2018, 10:40 PM | #25 | |||
FG XR6 Ute & Sedan
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regards Blue Last edited by aussiblue; 01-07-2018 at 10:52 PM. |
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01-07-2018, 10:47 PM | #26 | |||
FG XR6 Ute & Sedan
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regards Blue Last edited by aussiblue; 01-07-2018 at 10:59 PM. |
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01-07-2018, 10:51 PM | #27 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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I went into Coles yesterday and used the reusable bag/s I've been using at Aldi for years. Sometimes I forget to take them with me and pay at the counter for plastic ones, no biggy.
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01-07-2018, 10:52 PM | #28 | |||
IT Drone from Sector 7G
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...I can't tell how many times they have been used though. Bags are a part of the problem and a very visible one, so an easy one to start with. We've been using multi-use bags for our weekly grocery shop for years so no great drama in my case, although I do need to remember to take one in whenever I go in during the week for more than one item as buying a new bag every time I am in there will lose its allure when we're replaced all our old ratty Woolies and Coles freezer bags as the ones I buy have zips. The main issue is all plastics, I spent a day on St Kilda beach Rather than poking holes in various government's attempts to do something, rather than nothing (or just poking holes in arguments) you don't think it'd be better to do something rather than nothing? They may not have a perfect solution apart form wiping the earth of all human life, but there needs to be more thought put into things apart from using the oceans as a dumping ground for all the stuff we don't want. FWIW though the main issue is not household rubbish, it's industrial. ...tackling single-use household bags makes for easier point scoring for Pollies though |
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01-07-2018, 11:57 PM | #29 | |||
HUGH JARSE
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It is all about gesture politics that means nothing, achieves nothing and I have yet to meet someone who agrees that we should keep using single use plastic bags. The reason I suspect is that people no longer think about what is happening. Add in a media that also has an agenda and we never have a proper debate on anything anymore where we exchange facts and logic to arrive at some point where all concerns are out in the open. Are there any disadvantages in banning single use plastic bags? Well how about this one ... People will die. Mention that to people and they just shrug. That's right, they shrug. Does this not mean that people care more about the environment and animals that they do about their fellow human beings. A 2012 University of Pennsylvania study found San Francisco’s 2007 plastic bag ban killed people because reusable bags increased shoppers’ exposure to harmful bacteria that can infest them. “The San Francisco ban led to, conservatively, 5.4 annual additional deaths,” the authors concluded. Don't believe me? Here is the study http://www.austincontrarian.com/file...-id2196481.pdf |
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02-07-2018, 12:12 AM | #30 | |||
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I guess from a food safety and handling perspective, shoppers reusing their plastic bags, that are left in the hot boot of a car, where germs and bacteria can multiply and then used for taking fresh produce like fruit and veggies home, might be a health concern. How many consumers are actually going to clean their reusable bags? I wonder if the pollies considered that? |
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