To ban or not to ban: 6 facts about plastic bags

Facts to ponder while Montreal looks at banning single-use plastic bags

Image | plastic-bag-852-02728386

Caption: Canadians take home an estimated 55-million plastic bags every week. (CBC)

As the City of Montreal announces a consultation on the potential ban of single-use plastic grocery bags, here are some facts to consider:
1. Canadians take home 55 million plastic bags every week(external link), according to a 2008 Parliament of Canada report. That works out to almost 3-billion each year.
2. Countries such as Bangladesh, Burma and Thailand have banned plastic bags because of flooding(external link) caused when the bags clog up storm sewers.
3. A plastic bag ban in California has been suspended pending a referendum(external link) on the subject in November 2016. The bag lobby gathered enough signatures to launch the referendum.
4. A study at the University of British Columbia(external link) found 93 per cent of beached northern fulmars, a migratory bird related to the albatross, had stomachs full of plastic.
5. Scientists at the University of Illinois have found it’s possible to convert plastic bags(external link) into diesel and natural gas.
6. Leaf Rapids, a town in northwest Manitoba, was the first Canadian municipality to ban(external link) single-use plastic bags back in 2007.