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A Voice for our Ocean

NEWS: New Analysis Shows Plastic Bag Bans Help Prevent Plastic Pollution

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One pager with plastic grocery bag pollution analysis HERE

Summary

  • A new analysis by Ocean Conservancy scientists shows a 29% reduction in plastic grocery bags found on beaches following an increase in statewide plastic bag bans.
  • Plastic bags are among the top five deadliest forms of ocean plastic pollution according to Ocean Conservancy research.
  • Turtles and other sea life often mistake plastic bags as jellyfish and ingest them.
  • ICC volunteers have collected nearly 3 million plastic grocery bags in the United States alone – enough to cover 150 football fields.
  • Americans use 100 billion plastic grocery bags each year.
  • On average, plastic grocery bags are used for only 12 minutes before being thrown away.

WASHINGTON – Today, Ocean Conservancy scientists have released a new analysis that shows a correlation between an increase in statewide plastic grocery bag bans and a decrease in plastic grocery bags found on beaches and waterways by Ocean Conservancy’s International Coastal (ICC) Cleanup volunteers.

The number of bags collected per ICC volunteer nearly doubled during the COVID-19 pandemic – a time at which single-use plastic bag usage surged and bag bans were paused due to COVID restrictions. However, since 2020, as the percentage of the U.S. population covered by statewide plastic bag bans has doubled from 12 to 25%, we have seen a subsequent 29% reduction in the number of plastic grocery bags collected per ICC volunteer in 2022-2023 relative to pre-pandemic levels (2013-2019). There are currently 11 states with plastic grocery bag bans.

“Plastic bags are one of the deadliest forms of plastic pollution to marine life, and sadly, they are also one of the most commonly found polluting our beaches. The best way to prevent plastic grocery bags from becoming plastic pollution is by making and using fewer of them in the first place and this analysis confirms that bans are an effective way to deal with this problematic plastic. We hope that this analysis will inspire other states to pass bans of their own,” said Dr. Anja Brandon, Ocean Conservancy’s director of plastics policy and an environmental engineer who has helped draft landmark state and national legislation regulating plastic pollution in recent years.

The data used in this analysis was collected by ICC volunteers using the Clean Swell app or data sheets and contribute to Ocean Conservancy’s marine litter database. This database is the world’s largest repository of marine debris data and is used to inform scientists, conservation groups, governments, and industry leaders about ocean trash in support of plastic pollution prevention and advocacy efforts. ICC data have been instrumental in spurring policy change from being used to promote California’s SB 54 in 2022, the Farewell to Foam Act in 2023, the Florida balloon release ban in 2024 , and advocate for source reduction in the upcoming plastics treaty. Ocean Conservancy also named plastic bags as one of five most commonly collected ICC items that should be banned in a report from 2023.

Since the first ICC in 1986, over 18 million volunteers have joined local cleanup efforts big and small to remove over 385 million pounds of trash from beaches and waterways around the globe, making it the largest beach and waterway cleanup in the world. The 2024 ICC is currently underway, and you can visit seathechange.org to find a cleanup near you.

If you would like to set up an interview with one of Ocean Conservancy’s scientists or policy experts, please contact Roya Fox at [email protected] or 202.280.6285.

The plastic grocery bag ban one-pager can be found HERE.

For more information on this year’s upcoming ICC, you can find a media advisory HERE.

The International Coastal Cleanup media kit with photos, b-roll and data can be found HERE.

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ABOUT OCEAN CONSERVANCY  Ocean Conservancy is working to protect the ocean from today’s greatest global challenges. Together with our partners, we create evidence-based solutions for a healthy ocean and the wildlife and communities that depend on it. For more information, visit oceanconservancy.org, or follow us on Facebook,  X (formerly Twitter) or Instagram.

Media Contact

Roya Fox

202.280.6285

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