Perhaps you’ve placed an order and they’re standing right outside your front door. Shiny. Pretty. Insulated bags loaded with yummy items.
Amazon Prime, which offers doorstep drop-offs from Whole Foods, uses silvery plastic padded bags when packing up refrigerated and frozen items. While they seem to work nicely for delivering frosty food, the empties deserve attention. We’re doing just that.
We’re featuring useful ideas for repurposing them as well as focusing attention on how they factor into the plethora of unnecessary plastic waste.
Ideas for reusing and upcycling the foil insulated bags are plentiful. They are useful as-is — especially when you need a padded pouch. For example:
IMAGE: PATTI ROTH
For other projects, they’re quite versatile and a snap to work with.
FUN IDEAS FOR KIDS: DIY PICTURE FRAME AND WALLET. IMAGES: PATTI ROTH
The innovative folks at UpCycle Creative Reuse Center in Virginia shared some other ideas, including:
The Amazon website provides information on its different packaging types and directions for recycling or disposing of each type.
Foil insulation is not recyclable and should be put in your garbage bin,” the website states.
While traditional household recycling services likely won’t accept the bags, TerraCycle does. Purchase a Zero Waste Box for recycling shipping materials (current cost is $93 to $217). When you return the box to TerraCycle, the material is sorted and processed into raw materials for producing recycled plastic items, such as shipping pallets, composite decking, and recycling bins.
From our experience ordering groceries from Amazon Prime, there’s no obvious platform for requesting paper bags instead of these silver insulated bags when frozen and refrigerated items are on the shopping list.
We’ve emailed the question to Amazon’s media relations office but did not receive a reply.
Environmental advocates and lawmakers want businesses and manufacturers to assume more responsibility for single-use plastic products and encourage them to offer sustainable solutions.
“It isn’t an issue of proper waste management or finding alternative uses for things. Forty percent of the plastic that is clogging our earth is single-use plastic like these stupid bubble wrap pouches,” says Sarah Pierpont, executive director of the New Mexico Recycling Coalition.
IMAGE: KAYLA ENGLE-LEWIS, CHANGE.ORG
A petition on change.org asks Amazon to offer other options to customers. It states,
… customers are unable to request minimal plastic bags for produce. Other grocery delivery services, such as Instacart, use paper bags and are responsive to requests for minimal plastic bag use. Tell Amazon that you want the option of sustainable grocery delivery!”
Over 7,000 people have signed so far.