To achieve real, sustainable environmental progress, we need to focus on proven programs that encourage all citizens to reuse and recycle plastic bags. Unfortunately, the new law in New York City requiring stores to charge at least 5 cents for each bag won’t help us achieve our environmental goals. Furthermore, the fee amounts to a tax that will make life more difficult for families who are struggling to make ends meet.
Other communities that have taxes and fees on plastic bags have seen little, if any, environmental progress. This is partly because plastic retail bags make up a tiny portion—less than 0.3 percent—of the U.S. municipal solid-waste stream. That makes it impossible for such policies to achieve a meaningful reduction in overall waste. A recent study suggests that the total number of plastic bags used in Washington, D.C.,* has actually increased since 2010, when a 5-cent fee went into effect.
Bag fees also have negative environmental side effects. This is because alternative products, such as reusable bags, produce more waste and consume more resources than plastic bags. The popular thick plastic reusable bags generally imported from China, for example, are made from oil and often end up in landfills because they are not recyclable. Most plastic retail bags, on the other hand, are recyclable, highly reused, and produced in America from natural gas.