Evaluating the free market by comparing it to the alternatives (We don't need more regulations, We don't need more price controls, No Socialism in the courtroom, Hey, White House, leave us all alone)
Saturday, March 16, 2019
Plastic bag bans can backfire if consumers just use other plastics instead
"For example, so-called “single-use” plastic carryout bags can have a
multitude of unseen second lives – as trash bin liners, dog poop bags
and storage receptacles.
A U.K. government study calculated that a shopper would need to reuse
a cotton carryout bag 131 [times] to reduce its global warming potential – its
expected total contribution to climate change – below that of plastic
carryout bags used once to carry newly purchased goods. To have less
impact on the climate than plastic carryout bags also reused as trash bags, consumers would need to use the cotton bag 327 times.
My research has
evaluated carryout bag regulations from many angles. In a recent study,
I examined how plastic carryout bag bans in California have changed the types of bags people use at checkout, as well as these bans’ unintended impacts on
consumer purchasing habits. My results showed that bag bans may not
reduce total plastic usage if people begin purchasing trash bags to
replace the carryout bags they were previously reusing for their
garbage. As this finding shows, well-intended product bans can have
unintended consequences.
Plastic bag use in California
California provides a unique laboratory for studying plastic bag
regulations. From 2007 through 2015, 139 California cities and counties
implemented plastic carryout bag bans. This local momentum led to the
first statewide plastic bag ban in the United States, voted into law on
Nov. 8, 2016. Because these restrictions were adopted at different times
across the state, I was able to compare bag usage at stores with bans
to those without, while also accounting for potentially confounding
factors, such as seasonal shopping patterns.
Using sales data from retail outlets, I found that bag bans in
California reduced plastic carryout bag usage by 40 million pounds per
year, but that this reduction was offset by a 12 million pound annual
increase in trash bag sales. This meant that 30 percent of the plastic
eliminated by the ban was coming back in the form of trash bags, which
are thicker than typical plastic carryout bags.
In particular, my results showed that bag bans caused sales of small
(4 gallon), medium (8 gallon) and large (13 gallon) trash bags to
increase by 120 percent, 64 percent and 6 percent respectively.
Although plastic carryout bags are widely referred to as
“single-use,” consumers don’t necessarily treat them that way. By
comparing the reduction in plastic carryout bags used at checkout to the
increase in trash bags sold, my results revealed that 12 to 22 percent
of plastic carryout bags were reused in California as trash bags
pre-ban. Each reuse avoided the manufacture and purchase of another
plastic bag.
Moreover, my study underestimated reuse because it did not examine
other ways in which people use plastic carryout bags, such as wrapping
fragile items for shipping or storage instead of using plastic bubble
wrap. Nor did it address increased use of reusable bags made of thicker
plastic in place of disposable plastic bags.
The U.K. study
did examine the impact of shifting to thicker reusable plastic bags. It
found that if these thicker bags were not reused between 9 and 26
times, they would have a higher global warming potential than disposable
plastic carryout bags reused as trash bags.
Who bears the burden?
Who were the people who reused plastic carryout bags pre-ban, and
presumably bore the burden of buying trash bags post-ban? I found that
bag reuse was higher for people who purchased pet items and baby items –
in other words, who needed to collect and dispose of excrement. In
2017, nearly 6 percent of U.S. households had a child under 5 years old, 44 percent owned a dog, and 35 percent owned a cat.
I also found that plastic bag reuse was higher among people who
shopped for bargains. Although reusing shopping bags as trash bags could
be motivated by environmental concern, it also could be motivated by
frugality. Interestingly, I did not find a correlation between plastic
bag reuse and income or political leaning, but I did find a positive
correlation with higher levels of education."
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