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Simple store solutions could stop plastic produce bag waste
Simple store solutions could stop plastic produce bag waste

National Observer

time20-05-2025

  • General
  • National Observer

Simple store solutions could stop plastic produce bag waste

While plastic bags have bit the dust in Canada at grocery store checkouts, a Toronto study is looking at how increasing the use of reusable bags in the fruit and veggie section can slash a lesser-discussed polluter: single-use plastic produce bags. Undergraduate researcher Diego Arreola Fernández, supervised by Chelsea Rochman of University of Toronto's department of ecology and evolutionary biology, hopes his findings on alternatives to plastic produce bags can inform policy change for grocery chains and the federal government. Arreola Fernández, part of the U of T Trash Team led by Rochman, started last June visiting 29 grocery stores in downtown Toronto representing 11 major chains, including Loblaws, Metro and Longo's. Inside, he counted the plastic produce bags taken from dispensers every 10 minutes. 'We also looked at specific customer behaviour, so discreetly observing customers as they shopped for produce to see how many bags each one of them used, for what items, if they were using reusable bags or if they just put the things in their cart,' Arreola Fernández said. The analysis concluded that about 2,000 plastic produce bags are used every day at every grocery store. 'When we scale it to all the stores in [Toronto], it's hundreds of thousands of bags used in one day,' he said. 'The few stores that offered [reusable produce bags] had them in the corner, hidden,' researcher Arreola Fernández said. 'That's why we wanted to put them everywhere, to see if that could change.' Nationally, that's millions upon millions — and they're effectively all headed for the landfill. A 2021 Canada Plastics Pact study estimated only three per cent of film plastics in the country get recycled, including single-use produce bags. 'People don't think they can recycle them,' Rochman said. 'People reuse them often for dog poop, and then of course it's going to go into [the] landfill. But I also think that there's not a good market for recycling them because they're so thin.' How to change habits Phasing out single-use plastics at store checkouts has been a win for Canada this decade, but Arreola Fernández said plastic produce bags are still valued for their perceived food safety value, even though that argument doesn't hold water. 'For oranges, for avocados, for pineapple, for lemons, you're not going to eat the peel,' he said. 'You just literally cut it and then throw it away.' Along with shoppers' overreliance on these bags, Arreola Fernández said the stores were setting themselves up to fail. 'A lot of them had single-use produce bag dispensers in front of produce that arguably did not need them,' Rochman said. She and Arreola Fernández worked with Longo's from July to September to test how signage could get customers using fewer plastic produce bags. A 2023 study by Canadian researchers helped them pick more positive signage, such as telling customers that not grabbing plastic produce bags reduces waste and protects wildlife, and asking customers to consider putting produce in reusable bags or their cart. 'They showcased that the positive messaging was the one that worked the best,' Arreola Fernández said. After just testing signage, they added reusable mesh produce bags for purchase alongside plastic bag dispensers, at about a dollar for six bags. Only four of 11 grocery chains they consulted carried reusable bags, and in those stores that had them, they weren't prominent. 'The few stores that offered [reusable produce bags] had them in the corner, hidden,' Arreola Fernández said. 'That's why we wanted to put them everywhere, to see if that could change.' Lastly, they made the reusable bags free and ready for immediate use. Longo's stores saw doubling or even quintupling usage of the bags. 'All or nothing' At the store level, Rochman said every chain the study consulted was onboard with banning plastic produce bags. The problem, she added, is nobody will ditch them without a policy requiring all stores to follow suit — because they fear losing customers to chains that keep providing them. 'In Mexico City, we have paper,' Arreola Fernández said. 'They banned the [single-use plastic] produce bags.' They're not alone. California started its ban of plastic produce bags in January — the first US state to do so. 'It has to be all or nothing,' Rochman said. 'People aren't just going to voluntarily take them out of their store.' Still, Arreola Fernández was pleased by the initiative he observed Toronto shoppers taking to slash their plastics use. One man brought reusable produce bags to help his elderly mother shop, and one girl grilled her father to take fewer plastics. He and Rochman will return to each chain with the findings from their stores, and they'll also contact Environment and Climate Change Canada about presenting their results to federal plastics policymakers. Canadians will see whether the country's existing plastic bag ban remains in place under Prime Minister Mark Carney's Liberal government, particularly as the plastics industry continues its push to upend it. One possible sign of things to come is Carney's appointment Tuesday of Julie Dabrusin, who has worked on the federal ban and campaigned against the negative health impacts of single-use plastics, as environment and climate change minister. In 2021, plastic manufactured items were labeled 'toxic' under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act. However, the industry sued the federal government in a bid to disprove that plastic bags themselves are toxic, and won in court in fall 2023. Canada managed to keep the existing plastics ban and appeal the ruling last summer, with the federal court expected to release its decision this year. If the policy stays, Canada will regain power to decide which types of single-use plastics to remove from grocery stores next — including plastic produce bags. Arreola Fernández and Rochman hope to release their study findings this summer, to encourage more chains to reduce plastic bag dispensers, distance them from items that don't need packaging, and offer visible and affordable reusable produce bags. 'Soon, we could also see some changes with these stores that we collaborated with, hopefully as they implement some of the recommendations,' Arreola Fernández said.

Tiny plastics 'like rice on your kitchen floor' pose hidden pollution risk on Toronto's waterfront
Tiny plastics 'like rice on your kitchen floor' pose hidden pollution risk on Toronto's waterfront

CBC

time10-05-2025

  • Science
  • CBC

Tiny plastics 'like rice on your kitchen floor' pose hidden pollution risk on Toronto's waterfront

Often colourless and no larger than a grain of rice, plastic pellets are an easy-to-miss source of pollution on the city's shorelines, but a group of University of Toronto students and researchers wants the public to start paying attention. Calling itself the U of T Trash Team, the group is hosting a community cleanup on Sunday morning to spread awareness about pre-production plastic pollution on the waterfront. Compared to single-use plastics, the pellets' small size makes them hard to spot and difficult to pick up when they're spilled at factories or in the transportation process, according to Eden Hataley, a member of the Trash Team and a graduate student in physical and environmental sciences. "They're so small, they're so lightweight, that the best practice is to sweep anything you lose up immediately. But I mean, think about dropping rice on your kitchen floor, it's just difficult, right?" she told CBC Toronto. "So inevitably, some pellets get left behind." "The volume[s] of pellets that these companies are moving are so massive, that it's not like one or two, it's hundreds, thousands, millions over the course of the year." Prevention tools exist, but not in wide use The pellets – which end up on shorelines through direct spills or by getting pulled into the stormwater system – are the raw material used to make plastic products. Mesh storm water drains can pick up pellets before they end up in the environment, while seabins – which are trash traps for the water – and colanders can be used to clean them up, according to Hataley. But the traps aren't widely used in part because of a lack of public awareness about plastic pellets. That makes it difficult to demand policy changes, says Hataley. "I think [that by] bringing awareness to this [issue] through the community, we can drive momentum to get positive change to occur," Hataley said. The clean-up event, which takes place at Sir Casimir Gzowski Park Beach in the city's west end, is meant to show the public how pellets are collected and disposed of. The team will supply attendees with clean-up tools like colanders, so that they can play an active role in the process, the group says. Jessica Pellerin is senior manager of communications for Ports Toronto, an organization that has been collaborating with the U of T Trash Team on a trash trapping operation in the city's harbour since 2019. Ports Toronto and the Trash Team recently placed seabins along the city waterfront, Pellerin told CBC Toronto, and monitored how much trash they picked up. The bins collected nearly 175,000 small pieces of plastic from the city harbour between May and October 2024. Of that amount, 5.7 per cent was pre-production plastic pellets, she said. Province takes plastic pollution 'very seriously' Gary Wheeler, spokesperson of the Ontario Ministry of Environment, Conservation and Parks, says pellets make up more than 25 per cent of the plastic items found on beaches in the Great Lakes, outnumbering all other plastic debris items collected. The ministry takes plastic pollution "very seriously," says Wheeler, and has invested over $2.7 million into more than a dozen projects that reduce plastic pollution in the Great Lakes since 2018. Still, participatory initiatives such as Sunday's event are vital, Pellerin says, in keeping the issue top of mind for policy makers.

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