kjgood
Well-known member
so why are the massive volumes of other plastic packaging being addressed? apples that come in styrofoam and plastic covering? cereal liners? of course you need some packaging to hold/protect the goods in transit. as i do when I've popped into the supermarket for a half dozen items to carry home.
i completely accept they dont fully biodegrade, but the impact of that? infinitesimal in the grand scheme. i ditched an broken vacuum this weekend, i wonder how many bags worth of plastic were contained therein? the original anti-bag argument was over them being a blight in the landscape because they cause litter, ignoring the presence of all other litter. a degradable bag is still litter as it flutters around for weeks. its a fig leaf policy that doesn't address any real environmental issue, but is high profile so people feel "something is being done".
Absolutely agree about the over packaging of most goods that are on sale in the shops and this isnt limited to just food. Until manufacturers or possibly retailers are charged for the disposal costs of packaging on a product and not just as standard business waste, but based on the environmental damage of the packaging, then they will continue to over pack. Apples and bananna's are good examples, they already have the best packaging nature could think of.....the skin/peel. Why put them in a nice little tray with plastic film over?