You are on page 1of 5

Plastic or paper: Which bag is greener?

- BBC News 15/02/2020, 12(19 AM

Plastic or paper: Which bag is


greener?
By Tom Edgington BBC Reality Check

PA

The supermarket chain Morrisons is raising the price of its reusable plastic
bags from 10p to 15p as a trial and introducing a 20p paper version. The paper
bags will be available in eight stores as part of a two-month trial. The
supermarket chain said reducing plastic was their customers' top
environmental concern.

Paper bags remain popular in the US, but they fell out of use in UK
supermarkets in the 1970s as plastic was seen as a more durable material.

But are paper bags more environmentally friendly than plastic ones?

The answer comes down to:

how much energy is used to make the bag during manufacturing?


https://www.bbc.com/news/business-47027792 Page 1 of 5
Plastic or paper: Which bag is greener? - BBC News 15/02/2020, 12(19 AM

how durable is the bag? (i.e. how many times can it be reused?)
how easy is it to recycle?
how quickly does it decompose if thrown away?

'Four times as much energy'


In 2011 a research paper produced by the Northern Ireland Assembly said it
"takes more than four times as much energy to manufacture a paper bag as it
does to manufacture a plastic bag."

Unlike plastic bags (which the report says are produced from the waste products
of oil refining) paper requires forests to be cut down to produce the bags. The
manufacturing process, according to the research, also produces a higher
concentration of toxic chemicals compared with making single-use plastic bags.

Paper bags also weigh more than plastic; this means transportation requires
more energy, adding to their carbon footprint, the study adds.

Morrisons says that the material used to make its paper bags will be 100%
sourced from forests that are managed responsibly.

And if new forests are grown to replace lost trees, this will help to offset the
climate change impact, because trees lock up carbon from the atmosphere.

In 2006, the Environment Agency examined a range of bags made from different
materials to find out how many times they need to be reused in order to have a
lower global warming potential than a conventional single-use plastic bag.

https://www.bbc.com/news/business-47027792 Page 2 of 5
Plastic or paper: Which bag is greener? - BBC News 15/02/2020, 12(19 AM

The study found paper bags needed to be reused at least three times, one fewer
than plastic bags for life (four times).

At the other end of the spectrum, the Environment Agency found that cotton
bags required the most number of reuses, at 131. That was down to the high
amount of energy used to produce and fertilise cotton yarn.

Morrisons to trial 20p paper bags


Reality Check: Where does the plastic bag charge go?
Reality Check: Where is the plastic waste mountain?

But even if a paper bag requires the fewest reuses there is a practical
consideration: will it last long enough to survive at least three trips to the
supermarket?

Paper bags are not as durable as bags for life, being more likely to split or tear,
especially if they get wet.

https://www.bbc.com/news/business-47027792 Page 3 of 5
Plastic or paper: Which bag is greener? - BBC News 15/02/2020, 12(19 AM

In its conclusion, the Environment Agency says "it is unlikely the paper bag can
be regularly reused the required number of times due to its low durability".

Morrisons insists there is no reason its paper bag cannot be reused as many
times as the plastic one it is replacing, although it depends on how the bag is
treated.

Cotton bags, despite being the most carbon intensive to manufacture, are the
most durable and will have a much longer life.

Despite its low durability, one advantage of paper is that it decomposes much
more quickly than plastic, and therefore it is less likely to be a source of litter
and pose a risk to wildlife.

Paper is also more widely recyclable, while plastic bags can take between 400
and 1,000 years to decompose.

So what's best?
Paper bags require marginally fewer reuses than bags for life to make them more
environmentally friendly than single-use plastic bags.

On the other hand, paper bags are less durable than other types of bags. So if
customers have to replace their paper ones more frequently, it will have a greater
environmental effect.

But the key to reducing the impact of all carrier bags - no matter what they are
made of - is to reuse them as much as possible, says Margaret Bates, professor of
sustainable waste management at Northampton University.

Many people forget to bring their reusable bags on their weekly supermarket
trip, and end up having to buy more bags at the till, she says.

This will have a much bigger environmental impact compared with just
choosing to use paper, plastic or cotton.

https://www.bbc.com/news/business-47027792 Page 4 of 5
Plastic or paper: Which bag is greener? - BBC News 15/02/2020, 12(19 AM

What do you want BBC Reality Check to investigate? Get in touch

Read more from Reality Check

Follow us on Twitter

https://www.bbc.com/news/business-47027792 Page 5 of 5

You might also like