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The Great ATLANTIC Garbage Patch?

atlantic_ocean_garbageTwo separate studies conducted by ocean research groups found that millions of micro-particles of plastic are floating in the waters between Bermuda and Portugal’s mid-Atlantic Azores islands, threatening fish, ocean mammals and, potentially, the sea life humans farm for food.

The studies describe a soup of micro-particles similar to the so-called Great Pacific Garbage Patch, a phenomenon discovered a decade ago between Hawaii and California that researchers say is likely to exist in other places around the globe.

“I think a lot of people have this idea that there’s a plastic garbage island out there in the sea, and that’s not really what we see out there,” Lead investigator Kara Lavender Law said. “If you’re not looking for anything, you wouldn’t see these plastic particles, but we know that there are clearly millions of them out there.”

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Hey High School Students! Maine Energy Idols Competition Underway!

Efficiency Maine’s Maine Energy Idols Music Video Competition is underway—and the top prize is $1,000 and a public service television spot! Grab your friends and produce a 60 second music video combining your musical talents and video producing skills with your knowledge of energy efficiency. They’re looking for entertaining, informative, and thought-provoking spots that educate the public about energy efficiency. Potential topics include compact fluorescent lights (CFLs), alternative energy sources, hybrid vehicles, bio-fuels, energy evaluations, Kill-a-Watt energy meters, etc. We personally think this is the best idea we’ve heard in a long time AND a great way to get the word out about how detrimental plastic bags and paper bags are to the environment.

Think you have what it takes? Hurry…the contest ends May 26, 2010. For all the details, and how to enter, visit Efficiency Maine’s website.

CVS/pharmacy To Support World Wildlife Fund

Remember CVS/pharmacy’s GreenBagTag program that we discussed late last year? Well, CVS is once again making do-gooder headlines with this campaign.

Today the chain announced its support of World Wildlife Fund (WWF) in conjunction with the GreenBagTag program launched last fall. Starting on April 1st, for one year, CVS/pharmacy will donate 5 cents to World Wildlife Fund for every GreenBagTag sold to help protect the future of nature around the world.

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Thinking about Biodegradable Bags? Think Again.

florida_bag_reportWe recently stumbled upon an excellent resource in the battle to reduce single use plastic bag use—a recently published report from the Florida DEP on retail bag use and ways to curb it. While its data is skewed towards the authoring state, it’s chock-full of interesting and useful information to anyone—worldwide—contemplating a reusable bag program. Many of the interesting tidbits are things we at Bulletin Bag [.com] have covered in other blogs (The Great Pacific Garbage Patch, getting by without plastic bags, etc.), but we wanted to discuss one thing we haven’t touched on in any of our other writings: biodegradable bags.

While biodegradable and compostable bags aren’t new to market, there has been a relatively new push towards their use as alternative to traditional plastic bags. Even though bags that don’t persist in the environment sound like a positive step, there are serious drawbacks.

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Washington DC Plastic Bag Fee Working

The Washington DC disposable bag fee we told you about has been in effect for two months now, and we thought we’d write a quick follow up. As people adjust to the new five-cent fee, shoppers are assembling a wardrobe of bags that are functional, fashionable or both. They are getting used to bringing their own, even if they have to rush back to their cars to retrieve them. Many are buying reusable bags at store registers.

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Baltimore Explores Plastic Bag Bans and Fees

bag_banLawmakers in Baltimore are considering two bills aimed at heading off the proliferation of plastic bag litter around the city. One bill would ban grocery stores, convenience stores, and fast-food chains from giving customers their merchandise in plastic bags. Violators would be fined $250 for a first offense up to $1,000 for three or more offenses in a six-month period. The other bill would require merchants to levy a 25-cent fee on every plastic bag dispensed at carryout. Exceptions would be granted for bagging up fresh fish and meat, candy, cooked foods, dairy products, fruits and nuts and ice.

This isn’t the council’s first attempt to cut down on plastic bag litter, but supporters note the city is facing a state and federal mandate to do something about the trash littering Baltimore’s harbor, and plastic grocery and take-out bags are a big part of the mess.

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Do Not Put Plastic Bags In Curbside Recyling Bins

mfd-person-cartBob Cappadona manages the fifth-largest recycling facility in the United States: Casella Waste’s materials recovery facility in Charlestown, Massachusetts. That’s where more than 30 area municipalities bring their curbside recycling for processing.

Cappadonna says the biggest issue he has to deal at his facility is what he calls “plastic bag contamination. Single-use plastic grocery bags can clog the automatic sorting machines used to make recycling financially feasible. The bags are such a problem that sometimes Cappadonna has to shut down his 700-ton a day process so employees wielding knives can climb in to the huge machines to cut errant bags out—a delay that can take hours.

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Wal Mart Shows Its Green Side

walmartbagsWal-Mart’s greening up three of its Northern California stores. According to The Sacramento Bee, the move is part of an experiment to ease customers into the bring-your-own-bag habit as the huge retailer attempts to reduce its global waste. If they forget bags, they can buy reusable bags from Wal-Mart in two sizes, for 15 cents and 50 cents. The company is also training checkers on how to fill reusable bags to capacity.

The effort is part of the company’s Plastic Bag Initiative, which aims to reduce plastic bag waste at its stores worldwide 33% by 2013. The company says the effort would help it avoid producing 290,000 metric tons of greenhouse gases and prevent the consumption of 678,000 barrels of oil every year.

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Stephen Colbert Versus Captain Charles Moore

On January 6th , I saw a great interview on The Colbert Report. If you’re unfamiliar with the show, Stephen Colbert is the host and executive producer of the Emmy and Peabody Award-winning series on Comedy Central. I am a huge fan of his and the show is hilarious.

trashpattern_2Colbert’s guest was Captain Charles Moore. He’s the person who stumbled onto the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, which is believed to be the world’s largest dump. Plastic debris from the world over makes its way into waterways, where it’s carried out to sea and trapped in swirling ocean currents, thereby forming a trash dump in the North Pacific that’s twice the size of Texas.

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