By Nate Scherer
The fight against climate change is increasingly riddled with lawmakers’ feel-good attempts to save the planet by imposing top-down regulations that do nothing in the way of meaningfully reducing global temperatures or cutting pollution. However, these “feel-good” regulations have a familiar habit of harming consumers by eliminating popular goods and services or making them more expensive.
The latest example of such a regulation comes courtesy of California, where lawmakers recently passed a second ban on plastic grocery bags after the first attempt ended in failure. The first ban, SB 270—which took effect in 2014—prohibited grocery stores from distributing single-use plastic bags at checkout. It was designed to reduce plastic waste and encourage consumers to use reusable bags.
However, a study published by the California consumer advocacy organization CALPIRG recently found that the ban may have inadvertently led to a 47% jump in plastic bag waste between 2014 and 2022 due to consumers’ tendency to throw away thicker reusable plastic bags after a single use. That means that rather than reduce plastic waste, SB 270 created more of it, all the while charging consumers 10 cents per reusable bag. Plastic bag bans in other states have produced similar results, such as in New Jersey where plastic consumption was found to have tripled after the ban took effect.
While California policymakers now hope to close this apparent loophole by prohibiting grocery stores from selling thicker plastic bags and requiring them to offer only recycled paper bags at checkout, it is not difficult to envision there being additional unintended consequences. Policymakers are trying to control consumers’ subjective behavior and preferences—a strategy that rarely, if ever, works.
Other noteworthy examples of environmental regulatory failures include plastic straw bans. Motivated by cliché slogans like “The Last Plastic Straw Campaign,” which rely on viral turtle videos to drum up public support, policymakers have passed bans on plastic straws in states and cities across the country. Supporters argue such bans reduce plastic waste—some of which makes its way into rivers and landfills—while encouraging consumers to use reusable or paper straws. However, the success of such bans has been questionable at best, as plastic straws make up a negligible amount of plastic waste. Moreover, supposed green alternatives like paper straws have been found to pose their own environmental challenges, such as being comprised of greater amounts of water-resistant forever chemicals that are slow to biodegrade.
Bans on gas appliances also seem to be a fan favorite of policymakers who see natural gas and fossil fuel hook-ups as antithetical to a carbon-free future. Cities like Los Angeles, Seattle, and San Francisco have each recently implemented such bans in new buildings, as has the state of New York. While policymakers say such bans are needed to help curb greenhouse gas emissions, they require residents to make unnecessary sacrifices, such as using less popular appliances like gas stoves that are slower to heat up, provide less precise temperature control, and often mean higher monthly bills.
It is also worth noting that eliminating gas appliances has little impact on reducing carbon emissions if the city or state derives its power from oil or natural gas. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, 60% of U.S. electricity generation still comes from fossil fuels, and no state relies entirely on renewable energy. Likewise, most large population centers rely on many different forms of energy to meet their needs. Bans on gas appliances, straws, and plastic bags will not change consumer preferences, but they will deprive them of choice.
Countless other feel-good attempts at environmental regulation by policymakers intent on fighting climate change exist and many exact a similar toll on consumers, whether they be water-saving faucet requirements that reduce flow rates, bans on incandescent light bulbs, or restrictions on the type of yard a homeowner can have. While not all such regulations are bad or overly burdensome, they do quickly add up and have the overall accumulative effect of limiting people’s freedom to decide what good or service works best for them. While some Americans may view these limits as a necessary sacrifice to help save the planet, chances are most would not feel that way if they learned few meaningfully move the needle on halting climate change or reducing waste.
Nate Scherer is a policy analyst with the American Consumer Institute, a nonprofit education and research organization. For more information about the Institute, visit us at www.TheAmericanConsumer.Org or follow us on X @ConsumerPal
This article was originally published by RealClearEnergy and made available via RealClearWire.
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Who says cutting down trees to feed power stations and make way for windmills that kill birds and whales feels good.
Those who believe that to save the planet we must destroy it.
Yeah, that Vet Nam war quote does ring true
when applied to “The Climate Crisis” nonsense.
You don’t think forests of windmills are prettier than trees, Steve?
Just paint the tower brown and paint leaves on the blades!
Only the birds will notice the difference.
plastic bag ban? good for the forestry sector
Yup. Deforest the world.
Yes, I know, but trees will be cut down to make paper straws.
Remember when paper bags were banned and plastic bags were substituted? That was done to save the trees in the 1990’s. People got used to them and they were actually a better solution because they didn’t disintegrate in the rain, you could carry more of them in one hand and they could be reused for other things. Not to mention saving trees.
Now, plastic is evil, BANNED, and they want to charge you a quarter for a paper bag with weak paper handles that don’t work.
I solved the problem a long time ago. I bought canvas bags and they are still in use.
I used to amuse my kids by having one stand in the bag and I lifted him/her with the handles.
Can’t get that same quality today.
When I was a kid a prank was to put some dog doo in a paper and put by the front door of a disliked neighbor.
Then light the bag, ring the doorbell and run for cover where you could watch them stamp out the fire.
(Never did myself.)
Banning something costs government little. Add in fines etc…
There was a time when recycling glass and aluminum containers was done. Pay a deposit and get the deposit back when you recycle.
As kids, we did a lot of roadside cleanup getting the bottles and cans so we could recycle and get the deposits for ourselves.
A lot of plastic can not be recycled. A lot of plastic can.
If there is a personal financial advantage to recycle something, a lot of people will.
Instead of a negative reason to not do something, offer instead an incentive to do the alternate choice.
The left has no understanding of incentives.
Does the old expression, “No shit Sherlock” have application here?
Climate justice: Telling people what they cannot do, hence depriving people of liberty, the freedom to choose.
Prison planet
planet of the green apes
‘While some Americans may view these limits as a necessary sacrifice to help save the planet, chances are most would not feel that way if they learned few meaningfully move the needle on halting climate change or reducing waste.’
We’d all be a lot better off if the overwhelming evidence that GCMs are non-physical garbage and CO2 has never controlled temperature at any time during the geological record was readily available to ‘most’ Americans and not suppressed by ‘some’ Americans.
God gave us Ten Commandments. Lawyers gave us Ten Thousand Commandments.
Ok. And what did politicians give us?
We know the answer.
Yet another example of ignorant out of control government. Government at every level needs to be scaled back drastically.
Plastic grocery bags are not illegal in California and never have been. Retailers cannot provide them for use for their customers.
But you can still buy as many as you want on Amazon and use them whenever you like.
similar to hawaii, sams club sells them online, yet wont ship them to hawaii. amazon will at twice the price of sams
Stupidest idea ever thought up. Flow rates are already controlled by the faucet valves. I remove all flow restrictors from all faucet replacements or drill them out before use.
They are so stupid they restricted toilet valves too. Apparently, how fast your toilet refills after flushing is a serious concern for government regulators.
The reduction in tank capacity was worse. On occasion, three flushes where one did the job with the larger tank.
I’m still very annoyed they banned plastic straws here. Studies have shown that paper straws leech chemicals into your drink and the environment. I just drink without a straw now.
We should all know that plastic waste disposal is a major problem that needs to be addressed. So what is the solution?
The reason why we need ‘government regulations’ in general, is because so many people do not behave sensibly, pragmatically, honestly, and compassionately, regarding a concern for the environment, themselves and others.
Imagine what would happen if we didn’t have speed limits on the roads, and laws against theft and muder, and so on.
If everyone were to correctly dispose of their plastic bags and bottles into recycle bins, and, if the government agencies were to ensure that the recyclable materials were safely recycled, or safely incinerated with effective emission controls, there wouldn’t be a problem, other than the expense of ensuring that all processes are done correctly.
Remember when the ditches were full of bottes and garbage because people tossed them out of car windows? I do. In the 60’s.
I haven’t seen someone throw garbage out of a car window in decades. Kids no longer comb the ditches looking for returnable bottles for the deposit because there aren’t any. When the whole straws in turtle’s eyes became a thing I was dating a woman who was rabid anti straw. Anytime we would get close to the ocean I would insist on going down to the water and just stand there staring. After a while, she’d ask what I was doing. Looking for straws I would say, but I can’t see any, can you? She fell for it over and over.
We in the western world already dispose of our garbage safely. This is the same argument as reducing CO2. What point is there when India and China are erasing out entire production every few months? Same with plastic. Banning straws here won’t save any turtles, because those straws didn’t come from here.
Yes, were dispose of our garbage safely, but there is a tremendous amount of it.
The world would be a better place, in terms of conservation, ecology, land use, resources, pollution, etc. if we could achieve 100% recycling.
It probably is not possible to hit 100% (perfection is unobtainium), but it is likely the cost of trying to achieve that goal would be much less than the cost of eliminating CO2.
Not necessarily. Recycling takes resources. You have to weigh the impact to the environment of doing the recycling versus the impact of other disposal methods.
I prefer analysis of alternatives. Absolutely agree.
“We in the western world already dispose of our garbage safely.”
By exporting most of it to undeveloped countries??
I did a Google search on the problem of plastic waste, and all the sites I saw claimed that it is an increasing problem.
Here’s an article that addresses the problem in Australia in great detail.
https://newshub-website-data.s3.ap-southeast-2.amazonaws.com/2024/01/12060556/P1482-Plastic-Waste-in-Australia-Web.pdf
And here’s a few relevant quotes from the article.
“Despite repeated promises from successive governments, Australia has a growing plastic waste problem. So far, the ‘circular economy’ has been touted as the cure-all solution. But the plastic waste crisis is driven by ever increasing production and consumption, not the perpetually underperforming plastic recycling industry. Only about 15% of all plastic waste generated over the last 20 years has been recovered through recycling, composting or energy recovery.
1. Plastic is difficult to collect.
2. Mixed plastic waste cannot be recycled together.
3. Plastic recycling is wasteful, polluting and a fire hazard.
4. Recycled plastic carries a toxicity risk.
5. Recycling causes microplastics to be shed into the environment.
6. Plastic recycling is not economical and depends on extensive taxpayer-funded programs.
The only way to effectively reduce plastic pollution is to drastically reduce the production and consumption of plastics in the first place.”
I remember when dumping paper bags in favor of plastic bags was going to save the environment.