You may not know, because your news agencies probably don't want you to, that just this past January 2008, only four months ago, a country the size of China banned the use of plastic bags. It is a ban that will take effect in a couple of months, helping the world save an approximated 37 million barrels of crude oil and doubtless curbing global plastic contamination. The great city of San Francisco had already seen the light a year ago, instituting a ban on plastic bag usage in all major supermarkets and pharmacy chains. Similarly, Australia, Bangladesh, Ireland, Italy, South Africa, Taiwan and the city of Mumbai have either curbed or banned use of plastic bags. The U.S.A. needs to follow suit on a nationwide scale, not only to ban plastic bags, but also to ban all short-term or one-time use plastic products such as plastic bottles, plastic razors, bottle caps, etc., etc. We have entirely viable options, namely to use starch-based plastics that can biodegrade in a matter of months and that don't pose the toxic health hazards - Google bisphenol-a - of currently used conventional plastics.
You may not know, because your news agencies probably don't want you to, that just this past January 2008, only four months ago, a country the size of China banned the use of plastic bags. It is a ban that will take effect in a couple of months, helping the world save an approximated 37 million barrels of crude oil and doubtless curbing global plastic contamination. The great city of San Francisco had already seen the light a year ago, instituting a ban on plastic bag usage in all major supermarkets and pharmacy chains. Similarly, Australia, Bangladesh, Ireland, Italy, South Africa, Taiwan and the city of Mumbai have either curbed or banned use of plastic bags. The U.S.A. needs to follow suit on a nationwide scale, not only to ban plastic bags, but also to ban all short-term or one-time use plastic products such as plastic bottles, plastic razors, bottle caps, etc., etc. We have entirely viable options, namely to use starch-based plastics that can biodegrade in a matter of months and that don't pose the toxic health hazards - Google bisphenol-a - of currently used conventional plastics.
We the undersigned urge you to take immediate action to either stop production of new short-term or single-use plastic products (e.g. plastic bags and beverage bottles) or if you are a governmental decision-maker, to help implement the ban on production of such products. We will do our part by fully refraining from all use of such items until they are replaced with eco-conscious alternatives. It's us vs. plastic and at the current rate, it looks like it we will win the race to ensure its legacy.
We signed the "Ban Production of Short-Term Use Plastic Products" petition!
# 76:
2:35 pm PDT, Sep 21,Simos Tarabatzis, Greece
# 75:
8:24 am PDT, Jul 31,Andi Alnwick, New York
# 74:
3:42 pm PDT, Jul 29,Austin Kendall, Florida
# 73:
1:19 pm PDT, Jul 14,Greta Malkotzoglou, Greece
# 72:
3:06 pm PDT, Jul 11,Laurel Watson, Arizona
# 71:
7:18 pm PDT, Jun 24,Frances M. Amaya, Texas
Genug already with the plastics and petrochemicals! Think long-term. Don't the manufacturers and users of plastics realise that when plastic goes into a landfill, it stays there, possibly forever, and does not biodegrade? Maybe if we all recycled instead of throwing stuff away, the situation would improve. But we need products that are safe for ourselves and the environment to begin with! Then, we can reuse/recycle those safer, greener products with a clear conscience, even if we accidentally throw something away.
# 70:
2:24 pm PDT, Jun 5,Ines Seidel, Germany
# 69:
9:42 pm PDT, May 25,Sophie Szeferowicz, France
# 68:
1:59 pm PDT, May 25,Anne Seidel, Germany
# 67:
11:30 pm PDT, May 8,Laurel Burns, Maine
# 66:
5:37 am PDT, May 8,Kenneth Lapointe, Canada
Excellent petition and idea. I fully support a ban on all short term use plastics.
# 65:
12:16 pm PDT, May 5,Robin Farrace, California
# 64:
10:47 am PDT, May 4,Donnalene Sing, Hawaii
The Hawaiian Islands are part of the chain that recieves a lot of plastic waste. It is aweful to see how this impact marine wildlife.
# 63:
4:29 am PDT, May 4,Name not displayed, Wisconsin
# 62:
11:03 am PDT, May 2,Silky Wyld, Wisconsin
# 61:
3:28 pm PDT, May 1,Kayleen Gubrud, Minnesota
# 60:
12:32 pm PDT, Apr 30,Beverly Duffield, Utah
I am so tired of the plastic junk all over the place! Glass works just fine for bottles and there innumerable kinds of shopping bags. Why have fake, cheap, UGLY, toxic plastic playground equipment either?
# 59:
4:40 pm PDT, Apr 29,Dean Stubbs, Virginia
# 58:
12:53 pm PDT, Apr 29,Anita Kofta, Wisconsin
# 57:
8:15 am PDT, Apr 29,Vanessa Garvy, Illinois
# 56:
3:57 am PDT, Apr 29,Andrea Long, California
# 55:
10:11 pm PDT, Apr 27,Name not displayed, California