What Tomorrow’s Retail Bag Looks Like (Hint: It’s not a single-use plastic bag)
12 minutes. That’s how long it typically takes from the moment we receive a single-use plastic bag to the moment we discard it. And those 12 short minutes barely register within the much longer life cycle of the plastic bag. The story of the plastic bag starts with extracting finite fossil fuels––like natural gas ––and usually ends in landfills, or worse, in our oceans, where they enter our food chain and take decades to break down. It’s time we identify a better, more resilient way forward for retail––one that maximizes valuable resources and benefits the customer, the retailer and the planet.
Every year, 100 billion single-use plastic bags are used annually in the U.S., and fewer than 10% of those are recycled. Plastic bags continue to be one of the top ten most littered items on our beaches, contributing to a mounting global waste crisis. And now, the urgency of these environmental challenges are coming head-to-head with a rapidly changing retail landscape, as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. Stay-at-home mandates from many governments and work-from-home policies from many companies are driving the growth of e-commerce and digitization as consumer habits shifted almost overnight. This shake-up in retail norms presents the ideal moment for reinventing the single-use plastic bag through new business models and design innovation. If there was ever a time to rethink the status quo of our retail system, it is now.
The plastic bag plays a pivotal role in the retail experience; whether you’re buying groceries, ordering a shirt for delivery or picking up a prescription. It’s an extension of the store beyond its premises, and a convenience to the consumer, as we carry our goods home, pick them up from the curb or receive them at our doorsteps. To address the challenges of this shared experience around the plastic bag, we need a whole suite of solutions that can fit the varied retail contexts and customer needs across different geographic, social and economic environments.
This week, our Consortium to Reinvent the Retail Bag’s global innovation challenge, the Beyond the Bag Challenge, identified nine winning solutions that show the breadth and real-world promise of solutions that already exist to help reinvent retail and the plastic bag. Each brings a unique contribution to creating a new way to get our goods home, whether in reusable bag rental systems, tech platforms that incentivize customers to bring the bags they already own, or innovative, compostable materials. Together they can help pave the way forward, capitalizing on current market trends and shifting consumer habits in order to advance larger, industry-wide sustainable change.
Learn more about how these solutions are tracking the bag throughout its life, meeting customer needs and aligning with retail operations: www.closedlooppartners.com/what-tomorrows-retail-bag-looks-like
#circulareconomy #zerowaste #plasticfree #plasticbag
Director of Green Economic Transformation at the NY Climate Exchange
3yShien-ru Tsao are you familiar with what Kate Daly is up to at Closed Loop Partners?
Author of The Burnout Portal (Coming 2025) | New Human Paradigm Specialist | Award-Winning Former BBC Broadcaster | UK UN Women Delegate #CSW68
4yPlastic bag use has declined in the supermarkets significantly, but where it needs to be tackled is within cultural/ ethnic diversity shopping habits and behaviour. Plastic bag use is still very high in communities and countries entrenched with the notion, one more plastic bag use doesn’t matter. Many ‘corner shop’ vendors are years behind in environmental education and awareness. This has to be addressed. Everyone and I mean everyone, must be included in understanding the effects of climate change, environment pollution and how to change entrenched behaviour habits. Not sure what loop is doing about that? As it appears very Caucasian middle class focused in its team, from top /down.
Founder & C.E.O. at beyondGREEN biotech, Inc.
4yHas to be renewable material technology, as an alternative to plastics!
Sr. Director Sustainability
4yMeanwhile there are still Target stores and others still distributing plastic bags