Plastic Bag Powerpoint Presentation (11MB)

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Plastic Bags an awful load of rubbish

Transcript of Plastic Bag Powerpoint Presentation (11MB)

Page 1: Plastic Bag Powerpoint Presentation (11MB)

Plastic Bags an awful load of rubbish

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What is the problem?

• Australians dump 7,150 recyclable plastic bags into landfills every minute.

• Australians use more than 10 million new plastic shopping bags every day which equates to 3.92 billion each year.

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Page 4: Plastic Bag Powerpoint Presentation (11MB)

Clean Up Australia Day statistics

• Each year, Clean Up Australia Day identifies plastic as the major source of rubbish throughout Australia.

• One-third of all items collected are plastic, with almost one in 10 of these being plastic bags.

• This sums up to almost half a million plastic bags we collect each year.

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What’s in a plastic bag?

There are 2 types of plastic bags:

• High Density Polyethylene (HDPE) bagsthin bags used by more than 80% of retailers. These can be easily recycled.

• Low Density Polyethylene (LDPE)the thicker bags often used in department and boutique stores. While these bags can be recycled, there are few collection points for recycling.

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What types of plastic bags?

Be wary of biodegradable and degradable plastic bags:

• Standards have only recently been developed for biodegradable bags – ask your retailer to show that the bags have passed relevant international standards.

• Degradable bags just break into smaller pieces and can be even more damaging to flora and fauna.

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What’s the effect on the environment?• There are about 46,000 pieces of plastic floating in

each square mile of our oceans.

• It is estimated that plastic kills up to 1 million sea birds, 100,000 sea mammals and countless fish each year.

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We need to see the bigger picture

• When oil, gas and coal are used to produce plastic bags, they emit dangerous greenhouse gasses. The burning of gasses also creates emissions of toxic gasses, dioxins and heavy metals.

• Bags escape and float easily in air and water, travelling long distances.

• When animals which have ingested bags die and decay, the plastic is free again to repeat the deadly cycle.

• Do don’t forget it is not just ‘us’ that plastic can affect!

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What does Clean Up Australia do?• CUA lobbies for a complete national ban of single-use plastic

bags.

• SA recently banned lightweight plastic check out bags – CUA urges all Australian states to follow.

• CUA attends various government meetings including the Environmental Protection Heritage Council and urges government to address the issue of plastic bags.

• CUA has a ‘Plastic bag fact sheet’ which can be downloaded.

• The CUA website includes a comprehensive section on the issue of plastic bags.

• CUA encourages retailers to phase out plastic bags and introduce reusable bags.

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So what can you do?

You can make a difference just by changing somesimple habits:

• Plastic bags can be returned to supermarkets for recycling, most larger supermarkets recycle bags. Ask for the recycling bin.

• “Green” (polypropylene) bags can be recycled at local councils or Coles and Bi-Lo stores OR you can contact your local council to see if they collect or have drop-off points for recycling

• Councils, schools and community groups can sign up as ambassadors to run bag swaps, design reusable bags and get local shops on board

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So what can you do?

And here are some simple tips for home:

• Before recycling, turn bags inside out and remove any receipts and food scraps – contamination can cause problems in production and prevent recycled plastic from being used

• Avoid using plastic bags as bin liners. Simply put your rubbish straight into your household bin and give the bin a quick rinse afterwards, then reuse the water on your garden. OR: Three layers of broadsheet newspaper as a bin liner can also work well.

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What can retailers do?

Buy or produce your own reusable bags using our BagSelector. Materials include paper, calico, polypropylene(‘green’ bags), starch-based biodegradable and hemp.

Our preferred supplier is Adsun: Ph (07) 3399 7933

www.adsun.com.au

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For more information:

www.cleanup.org.au