Saturday, 14 September 2013
The Plastic Bag Tax
From 2015, shops will be required by law to charge 5p to customers for a 'single use' plastic bag.
Ok, so I know they are not actually single use, in that we often use plastic bags for other things than just to get our shopping home. But the point is, by having this system of being able to use brand new bags each time we shop it's creating a huge environmental problem.
A while ago, Sainsbury's removed their 'single use' plastic bags from the tills and just had the 'Bag for Life' bags available which cost 10p. But for reasons I'm not party to (but probably involving being scared to lose customers to supermarkets that didn't follow suit) they stopped the initiative and back came the plastic bags, cluttering up the till area and cramping our packing space.
It is just so much nicer in France where there are no bags at all in the packing area of the till. And people, funnily enough, don't seem to forget their shopping bags. Well, if your only alternative is to go to the customer service desk, queue up behind all the people who need their complicated enquiries answered, and wait to be served, so you can purchase a sturdy and quite pricey shopping bag, then you're unlikely to forget a second time, right?
Now, I've heard people arguing for the need to get a constant weekly supply of shopping bags, just in case they run out at home. Well, I've used reusable shopping bags for at least 5 years now - probably nearer ten - and, d'you know what? I still have a whole stash of single use carrier bags in my recycling cupboard - despite twice taking several bags to my local charity shop. All these bags are just the ones left by other people bringing stuff into my house in single use plastic bags.
Maybe once the tax comes into place, my plastic bag holder will become redundant, but I guess they mount up because I don't find a use for them very often.
You've got two years to practise! The law doesn't come in until the autumn of 2015. All you need to do, is follow two tips from my book, 101 Ways to Live Cleaner and Greener for Free.
Simples, says the Meerkat!
For more waste reduction tips that save you a fortune too, you could buy the book! http://viewbook.at/101Ways.
Monday, 10 May 2010
So many bags?
Monday, 19 October 2009
A use for broken crockery
I save up broken bits of crockery in a tub in my garage and use them to put in the bottom of plant pots over the drainage holes. As we had a nice weekend I decided to get my pots ready for bringing in my geraniums. They are my favourite plant, not least because they need very little watering even in dry weather and if you bring them in to a shed or a conservatory or a cool windowsill in your house, then they will go on getting better and better, year after year.
Thursday, 25 September 2008
101 ways to reduce your carbon footprint for free
As I was being 'dissed' yet again for my recycling habits, I came up with the idea of putting together a list of 101 ways to reduce your carbon footprint for free. Free? Yes, absolutely free.
I thought I'd have no trouble coming up with hundreds of little things that we could all do that would be more environmentally friendly but didn't cost a penny. Surely it would be a doddle!
Well, it wasn't.
The ridiculous thing about « going green » is that it so often costs more than not being green. It costs more in terms of time and effort, and all too often, it costs more in terms of hard cash.
There may well be lots of things with long-term savings, but realistically, for many of us on this planet cash-flow comes first. It is the initial spend that we think about, rather than the long-term cost saving.
This, to me, is an important issue governments face that they could do something about but don't. Would it really be that hard to structure all taxation, vat and so on, to always favour the green option?
That said, the list is growing …..