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Paul S Person <psperson@old.netcom.invalid> writes:Congratulations. Your jugs join the 9% of plastic that gets recycledOn Tue, 13 Aug 2024 22:15:25 -0700, The Horny Goat <lcraver@home.ca>As noted below, I explicitly included 4liter/1gallon milk jugs.
wrote:
>On Thu, 08 Aug 2024 18:35:55 GMT, scott@slp53.sl.home (Scott Lurndal)
wrote:
>The only solution is to completely eliminate single-use>
plastics. I'd even go so far as to include milk and
juice jugs in that ban (glass is far more recyclable
and aside shipping weight, similar in cost).
>
Paper milk cartons can eliminate the plastic lid.
What does "single use" mean? I understand in the context of fast food
cups but how about less common items like those 4 liter milk jugs I
get my milk in (and generally put out each week in the recycling bin)
or similar such items - for instance my cheddar comes wrapped in
plastic and once the cheese is eaten, that plastic wrapper isn't
getting used again <grin>
I'd challenge that: The primary reason is money.>The primary reason is shipping weight.
There is a /reason/ we replaced glass with plastic, at least in some
cases.
Single use plastic shopping bags are an interesting case ofInterestingly, while, until they were banned, one-time-use plasticThe Trader Joes produce bags are biodegradable.
shopping bags were taxed (as were and still are papter one-time-use
paper bags), smaller bags used to contain fruits and veggies were
exempt, despite clearly being one-time-use.
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