Benefits of a plastic bag

It can be easy to overlook the advantages of plastic bags due to the perception
they are environmentally unfriendly. While there are environmental drawbacks
there are also many advantages to using plastic bags. Plastic bags, poly bags and
pouches can be beneficial to you, retailers and the environment too.

Benefits for you

Plastic bags such as poly ones are great for use in the home. They come in all
different sizes so you can put whatever you want in them to store small items.
They are hygienic so are perfect for storing food. You can put a pack of
biscuits in them to stay fresh or you can put meat or fish in it to store in
the fridge. Not only do they keep food fresh, they are also good for storing
small lose objects. Just pop them in the bag and put in a draw.

Plastic bags aren’t just good for the home, they are great for shopping too. How many
times have to gone in your favourite store, spent money on clothes only to find
it poring with rain when you get outside? Holding your umbrella in one hand and
your clothes in the paper bag in the other, you soon start to realise that your
bag is wet along with your new items. Plastic bags are able to endure bad
weather better.

And if you buy wet, cold or frozen products from the supermarket, carrying these in
a plastic bag will be better.

Benefits for the retailer

Plastic bags also give retailers piece of mind because they know that if you will leave
their store and if it does rain, your items and goods won’t be damaged.

Good, high quality plastic bags will encourage you to reuse the store’s plastic bag
more often and will therefore be promoting them as you use their bag over and
over again. There are a number of other packaging types in addition to the
plastic bag like Jiffy badded bags for sale online in many packaging supplier
sites.

Benefits for the environment

Manufacturing plastic bags is a much more simple process than it may first appear. Producing plastic and poly bags creates 50 per cent less greenhouse gas emissions than
producing paper bags. Making plastic bags also uses 70 per cent less energy and
leaves fewer by-products than the paper version.

Carrier bags today use 70 per cent less plastic than they did 20 years ago. However,
many are made from polyethylene which is a plastic that is non-degradable. This
plastic takes a long time to break down and the misuse of plastic bags is responsible
for contamination on landfills. Plastic bags are synthetics and when they end
up on landfills they don’t dissolve.

However, responsible use and disposal of them are a benefit to the environment. You can
help to reduce the amount that end up on landfills by reusing them as many
times as possible. Take your plastic bags on your next shopping trip and use
them for your new items. Clean the poly bags after you have used them and use
again.

Once you have used the plastic and poly bags or pouches as much as you can you can
recycle them. This can be done at large supermarkets which offer on-site
recycling banks for plastic bags. 

 

Speak Your Mind

*