Thursday, 22 November 2007

Plastic Bag free, not free plastic bag

Plastic bag free ArundelIt looks as though Arundel is trying to become a 'plastic bag'-free town, following in the footsteps of Modbury. Don't get me wrong, replacing 'free' plastic bags with reusable or recyclable bags makes sense... but isn't this a very minor environmental concern in a tourist town such as Arundel?

This is a town, let's face it, that has more than one "lifestyle" shop selling things people don't need. But where's the campaign to replace them with useful shops that would discourage people from driving to buy elsewhere? This is a town that encourages tourists to visit for no better purpose than drinking tea and looking at the castle. That's an unnecessarily large carbon footprint we're generating, don't you think? This is a town with a Farmers' Market where some of the retailers will travel around 100 miles to sell their local produce... and countless visitors will drive to Arundel - past their local shops - in order to buy here.

Yes, I've shopped at the lifestyle shops. Yes, I've enjoyed tea and cake here. Yes, I shop at the Farmers' Market. And yes, all that makes me a bit of a hypocrite.

So good luck to the campaigners. I probably won't be at the meeting... but I'll definitely be outside the chocolate teapot shop with a placard.

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4 Comments:

Blogger Faith said...

I agree with what you say about farmers market, tea, castle etc - but plastic bags are something we can easily do without. Every time I shop I take a big shopping bag with me, and practically every time I'm the only shopper in the supermarket who doesnt need plastic carriers.

22 November 2007 at 17:36  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Definitely can do without the plastic bags. Most supermarkets have material bags to buy now and you can just use your own anyway.

Crystal xx

22 November 2007 at 17:45  
Blogger Mark Bridge said...

Very true, Crystal. Which begs another question: if supermarkets are smart enough to sell reusable bags, why aren't they smart enough to stop giving away free ones?

22 November 2007 at 17:51  
Blogger Frances said...

Good to see your wisdom amongst us again. I totally agree with all that you write about ecology in areas dependent on consumption.

Years ago, as an economics student, we just never learned about these issues. But now they really do intrigue me, as a shop manager of a company with great green ethics. I love it every time that at customer says, no tissue paper, or no shopping bag, please.

Looking forward to more blogs from you.

23 November 2007 at 01:22  

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