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ahartmetz 2 days ago

The trick is to always have them where you will need them. I always have one or two in my backpack, in my car, in my luggage when I travel... Their size and weight is almost nothing and the only effort is putting them back after use. Which is where it occasionally fails, sure.

throwawayffffas a day ago | parent [-]

The trick is to not bother, just make sure your bag ends recycled not in the street or in the ocean.

const_cast a day ago | parent | next [-]

If you recycle then it's probably just going to a street or ocean somewhere else. Plastic recycling is more or less made up.

eptcyka a day ago | parent [-]

They could go into a furnace to get turned into heat, electricity and CO2.

alkyon a day ago | parent [-]

In theory yes, in practice they will be "exported" to a thrid world country with limited processing capabilities and directly dumped into the ocean.

amalcon a day ago | parent | prev | next [-]

If you use single stream recycling for this, then this is actively bad. Plastic bags clog the sorting machines, and then get thrown out because (even if labeled) they are usually contaminated.

latexr a day ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Reuse is significantly more effective than recycling. Bothering is something we should indeed do. Though yes, disposing of bags properly is also much superior to just throwing them on the floor.

quickthrowman a day ago | parent | prev [-]

Plastic bags are made of polypropylene, and are garbage.

Plastic for the most part is basically garbage, there are so many types that it’s hard to recycle it. PET and HDPE can be recycled fairly easily if they’re sorted, the rest aren’t really worth it (polypropylene, low density polyethylene, PVC).

The only thing that is almost always economically worth recycling is metal, which is separated from the paper/glass/plastic if you have single stream recycling. Plastic should be burned in a cement kiln or buried in a modern landfill, unless it’s well sorted HDPE or PET.