Action: Eliminate Produce Bags
Single-Use Plastic
Unless this is your first time visiting Earth911, you probably know about the environmental damage caused by plastics at every stage of their lifecycle, especially when they break down into microplastics. It’s important for everyone to be working towards a post-plastic world to break free of plastic pollution. Eliminating your personal plastic usage entirely may not be possible in a world where nearly every product contains some kind of plastic. But eliminating single use-plastics like water bottles is a good place to start. And few single-use plastic items have a shorter useful life than grocery store produce bags. Even plastic shopping bags are often reused to line wastebaskets or clean up the catbox. But produce bags travel from produce aisle to your countertop, often to be tossed before the food even goes in the fridge.
When You Need a Bag
Sometimes a bag is necessary. Mushrooms last longer in a paper sack, which is recyclable. And some small items like green beans need to be bagged to keep them together. For those items, some co-ops and health food stores allow you to bring your own reusable bag or container. But if your grocer doesn’t allow you to bring reusable containers — and you have access to composting services — you might consider buying your own compostable bags for these items.
Going Bagless
Most of the time, produce bags aren’t necessary. Not for cleanliness — whether you bag or not, you should wash your produce before you eat it. Not for protection — whether you bag or not, you can’t stack heavy items on top of produce in the shopping cart or in grocery bags. Most produce doesn’t really need to be kept together, either. Bagging two heads of broccoli or three apples doesn’t really save time at the register or when putting food away. Small items like asparagus are already tied together, and bigger ones like celery don’t even fit in produce bags very well.
This week, when you do your grocery shopping, put produce in your cart without bagging it first. As long as you don’t stack heavy things on top (which you wouldn’t do to bagged produce either) your produce should arrive home in the same condition it always does. And you will have eliminated half a dozen or more plastic bags whose useful life is rarely more than an hour or two.