There's definitely more plastic than we need. I've seen individual bananas sold in styrofoam.
But I think that's a tiny % of plastic waste and the vast majority comes from the production processes.
Factories wrap things up heavily before sending their items along to the next step in the value chain.
Farmers sometimes lay down plastic sheets on the ground.
I hate it as much as anyone but removing any of it will have knock-on effects.
It's better to wrap that pallet in an extra pound of plastic rather than it getting damaged and having to re-produce the whole 1000-2000lb amount of goods.
It might be better to lay down the sheet and use less pesticide & water, or be able to grow crops closer to the point of use.
It was also a time when grocers kept a lot of goods in bulk, and customers were given portioned quantities wrapped in paper, or in paper bags. The additional labor costs were the reason this practice was ultimately replaced, largely by single-use plastics. Of course, capitalism and market forces mean that this is more efficient and profitable (even though they do not take into account externalities and future deficits caused by the damage these products inflict. I would suggest that the costs were more inline with reality, and in a time when folks are already too isolated, I would pay a premium to frequent an establishment that still offered that sort of full-service, more sustainable practice.
But I think that's a tiny % of plastic waste and the vast majority comes from the production processes.
Factories wrap things up heavily before sending their items along to the next step in the value chain.
Farmers sometimes lay down plastic sheets on the ground.
I hate it as much as anyone but removing any of it will have knock-on effects.
It's better to wrap that pallet in an extra pound of plastic rather than it getting damaged and having to re-produce the whole 1000-2000lb amount of goods.
It might be better to lay down the sheet and use less pesticide & water, or be able to grow crops closer to the point of use.