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Archive for December, 2009

DC leads (green) nation in bikes, bags

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

As world leaders gather in Copenhagen this week for the United Nations Climate Change Conference, I sit in my chilly home office and take the Green DC Pledge. I pledged to, among other things, bring a reusable bag to the grocery store and carry a non-disposable water bottle instead of buying bottled water. When the pledge asked me to fill in another way I’m going green, I wrote, “Put on an extra layer instead of turning on my heat.” (But I draw the line at wearing a hat indoors.)

So other than encouraging residents to take vows of green, what else is the nation’s capitol doing to help save our planet? Yesterday I talked to Alan Heymann, acting chief of staff for the District Department of the Environment.

What’s new and green in Washington?

This year, we introduced the Mayor’s Green DC Agenda. There’s a list of hundreds of action items, like putting green roofs on government buildings, planting more trees and expanding green collar job training.

Where does DC stand on the green spectrum, compared to other cities?

It depends on how you’re measuring it. I think we’re doing pretty well. We had the first bike-sharing program in North America, and we’re second behind New York in terms of people getting to work in some way other than driving. We’re first in the nation per capita in Energy Star buildings. We’re close to the top in actual square footage of green roofs, and we were the first jurisdiction in the country to adopt a Zipcar program for our own government fleet.

Tell me about DC’s new bag law.

Starting January 1, 2010, we’ll be the first city in the nation to have a fee on both paper and plastic bags. Everyone who sells food or alcohol in the District is covered—and that includes department stores that have a chocolate counter or a Best Buy that sells candy by the register. Everything they sell will be in a bag that costs five cents, unless the customer brings a reusable bag. There are some exceptions. If you go to the grocery store and buy peaches, or the hardware store to buy a key, those plastic bags are OK. Our agency is handing out more than 100,000 reusable bags—mostly to low-income residents, at senior wellness centers and at CVS locations between now and the end of December.

So where will the five-cent fees go?

The business will keep one or two cents (two if they offer a rebate to customers who bring their own bags). The rest of the fee will go to the new Anacostia River Cleanup and Protection Fund. DDOE will use this money for actually cleaning up the river and educating the public about litter and handing out more reusable bags. The bag fee is estimated to generate $3.6 million in the first year. The estimates will decline over the years, but that’s an outcome we’re thrilled with. The point is to get people to use fewer bags so they don’t end up in the river.

What else will contribute to the fund?

The bag bill will be the biggest contributor. We’ll also do an income tax check-off for 2009 so residents can donate money to the fund. And in 2010, the Department of Motor Vehicles will have a commemorative Anacostia River license plate, so the proceeds from the sale of the plates will go into that fund.

Other than carrying reusable bags, what can residents do?

They can sign the pledge, which includes things like planting a tree in your front yard, bringing your own lunch to work so you don’t have all the to-go containers, and having a meatless meal once a week or more often.


Click here to read about Washington’s Anacostia River and its watershed.

 

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Three Calif. Wal-Mart stores to stop providing free bags

Friday, December 4th, 2009
By Mike Verespej | PLASTICS NEWS STAFF
Posted December 3, 2009

WASHINGTON (Dec. 3, 4:50 p.m. ET) — Starting Jan. 1, Wal-Mart Stores Inc. will no longer provide single-use plastic bags at three stores in California. The pilot program will test whether consumers accept the concept of stores with no free bags.

Wal-Mart is one of the largest dispensers of disposable plastic bags worldwide, handing out an estimated 27 billion in 2007. The company has set a goal to reduce plastic shopping bag waste in the U.S. by 25 percent by the end of 2013. Its plastic bag reduction goal for its international operations by the end of 2013 is 50 percent, and its overall combined goal is a 33 percent reduction.

All Wal-Mart stores in the U.S. sell polyester reusable bags for $1 and reusable non-woven polypropylene bags for 50 cents.

Since October, the three test stores in Ukiah, Citrus Heights and Folsom, Calif., have also been selling a third alternative — a 15-cent PP bag that Wal-Mart says is both reusable and recyclable. The 15-cent bag is only available at those three stores.

Wal-Mart had initially planned to start the concept of no free bags at the three stores in October, but felt that the Christmas shopping season was the wrong time to start the experiment.

“The goal of the test program is to gauge customer reaction to low-cost reusable bags,” said Amelia Neufeld, media manager in Sacramento, Calif., for Wal-Mart. “This is about our commitment to zero waste. We think this can help us achieve that.”

She did not say how long the pilot program would last.

“We believe that being an efficient and profitable business goes hand-in-hand with being a good steward of the environment,” Neufeld said. “By offering our customers the option to bring groceries and purchases home in reusable bags, we are reducing the amount of plastic we use and the amount of waste that ends up in the home of our customers.”

Keith Christman, senior director of market advocacy for plastics at the American Chemistry Council in Arlington, Va. said ACC supports Wal-Mart’s effort to reduce the number of bags it hands out, but that it is too early to assess where the pilot program will lead.

“Nationwide, they are strongly committed to recycling plastic bags,” Christman said. “We completely support that goal and their comprehensive approach to reducing bag waste.”

Neufeld said the company is “hearing positive comments from customers and will continue to seek their input.” But Christman thinks Wal-Mart will limit the no-free-bag approach to communities that impose bag bans or fees.

He noted that there has been “a lot of push-back from consumers online” in newspaper blogs in the cities where the pilot program will take place, adding that he would not be surprised to see the program postponed.

“This is a pilot program and you shouldn’t make any conclusions” about what might occur next, he said. “We expect they will continue to recycle nationwide.”

Wal-Mart estimated that in 2008 it reduced global plastic bag waste by 38.5 million pounds, the equivalent of 2.5 billion bags, since 67 bags weigh roughly one pound. It estimated that since the end of 2006, it has redirected more than 97 million pounds of plastic from landfills.

Neufeld said the company is reducing plastic bag waste by both offering reusable bags and by continuing to offer bag recycling options. In addition, “We are educating our employees on packing merchandise more efficiently. We are creating materials for stores to use to educate customers on how to minimize bag use. We are offering incentives to the cashiers to decrease bag use,” she said.

The blue 50-cent reusable bags have been sold in Wal-Mart stores since November 2008. Wal-Mart said each bag will hold up to 22 pounds in merchandise and has the potential to eliminate the need for up to 50 disposable bags over its estimated one-year lifetime.

Neufeld said the 15-cent bags have the potential to eliminate approximately 75 single-use bags in a year.

Christman said the use of PP in those reusable bags underscores the value of plastics. “Plastics is a great material for both reuse and recycling,” he said.

Neufeld said both types of reusable PP bags can be recycled in Wal-Mart recycling bins.

The Bentonville, Ark., retailer would not disclose details about its sales of either the polyester or PP bags. But it said that since it began selling reusable bags in October 2007, it has sold enough reusable bags to eliminate the need for 1 billion plastic shopping bags.

Nain plastic bag ban in effect

Friday, December 4th, 2009

Last Updated: Tuesday, December 1, 2009 | 8:16 AM ET Comments27Recommend17

The community of Nain, in northern Labrador, has followed through on a promise to ban plastic shopping bags, becoming one of the first places in the province to do so.

Stores in the community are now no longer permitted to hand out the bags. People will have to use boxes or cloth bags, or they’ll have to buy paper bags.

Sarah Erickson, the head of the Inuit community government in Nain, said every household in the town received five free reusable bags in November.

She said the ban, which was voted on by the community government in late July to come into effect Monday, should cut down on litter.

“In the spring will be the best time to tell,” she told CBC News, “because when we have our spring cleanup, you know, that’s the majority of the cleanup are the plastic bags. Anyone that’s flown into Nain will see them scattered all through the bush around the airstrip.”

Erickson expects people to support the ban.

The community, with a population of 1,200, was going through more than 100,000 plastic shopping bags each year.

Store bags become mini billboards

Friday, December 4th, 2009
- The Associated Press

NEW YORK — The scale is smaller, but holiday shopping bags can have a marketing heft that rivals a billboard.

Retailers get as much as they can into - and out of - the totes they give to customers. The bags are stuffed with brand messaging, designed to remind shoppers to visit a particular shop and pique their curiosity about what might be inside.

“Consumers, especially older ones, look forward to the bags. … It’s always been exciting to see what the holiday bag was going to look like. Part of the fun of getting the bag is that it’s a little shinier, a little heavier, a little more special,” says consumer psychologist Kit Yarrow.

Bloomingdale’s positions its holiday bags almost as collector’s items, says company vice president Anne Keating, and they’re often used to decorate stores. She has framed original bags in her office.

The 2009 theme is “Happy Merry Peace and Love;” citron green and magenta are the dominant colors. In 2008, Bloomingdale’s tapped singer Tony Bennett to do the design. (He created a winter street scene of a taxi with Santa in the passenger seat zooming by the flagship store.)

“It’s like sending a holiday card to our guests that come to the store. The shopping bag has been a wonderful way to spread the holiday message,” Keating says. “It’s so attractive that people use them as their gift box and presentation piece.”

Lucky Brand, which didn’t do a unique holiday bag last year, pulled out the big guns this year with a distinctive collage design by Sir Peter Blake, a British pop artist who designed The Beatles’ “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” album cover. It’s the first offering in what Lucky Brand plans on being an artist-bag series.

“We want you to be in the mall and have people notice these happy bags. It’s a little advertising for us,” says company co-founder Barry Perlman. Store visuals will complement the bag, adds partner Gene Montesano.

Yarrow, co-author of “Gen BuY: How Tweens, Teens and Twenty-Somethings Are Revolutionizing Retail” and a professor at Golden Gate University, says it’s a worthwhile investment for retailers.

“Sometimes the bags are more expensive than what’s in the bag, but hopefully that person will continue to use it - their lunch goes in, sweater, extra shoes,” she says. “The bag is not just a billboard, it’s an endorsement. If someone you think is cool is carrying the bag, then you think that store is cool.”

Talbots is using its red tartan-plaid holiday bags as an opportunity to transform its marketing message.

Not every store buys into a new bag, though.

Tiffany & Co., for example, has an easily identified bag and wouldn’t dream of changing it, says chief marketing officer Caroline Naggiar.

The key, she says, is its color, a trademarked shade of blue.