plants. planet. people

Supermarkets must stop using plastic packaging, says former Asda boss

Source: http://azdailysun.com/news/opinion/columnists/would-a-ban-on-plastic-bags-do-much-good-yes/article_b2055dd0-a999-5f50-85ed-b7621a3805c3.html

The detrimental impacts of thin-film plastic bags on our planet earth have been discussed and examined in much research and dialog. It is a topic that has been brought up over and over again in an arrays of discussion – from political campaigns, environmental concerns, public health, to economic efficiency, plastic bags affect a multitude of stakeholders of the earth.

The former CEO of one of Britain’s largest supermarkets, Asda, is calling for all supermarkets to stop using plastic bags ENTIRELY. Andy Clarke bluntly pointed out that the effort to recycle plastic bags is a mere “never-ending stream of initiatives”, because sooner or later the plastic bags will eventually reach landfill or the bottom of the ocean.

The amount of plastic produced in a year is roughly the same as the entire weight of humanity” – this shocking statistics reveals the unnecessarily copious amount of plastic bags that are piling up on our land, as well as a prediction of a soon-to-come natural catastrophe.

I think Clarke brought up a very important point of eliminating plastic bags at their roots. The reduction and elimination in plastic should not be merely focused on the take-away bags, but also on the products coming into the store. He called for Asda and other supermarkets to use the host of new products coming on the market to cut plastic pollution.

I believe that the responsibility to tackle this issue should be the all participants in the consumption chain. We as the buyers, can contribute through conscious purchasing, and the producers can use this opportunity to innovate in packaging, which consequently saves environmentally minded consumers the hassle of hunting for environmentally friendly choices across the store.

The crisis of plastic bags are just a tip of the iceberg, but it provides us with the preliminary notion of “collective effort” from all stakeholders.

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