Adam Minter, Columnist

How a Ban on Plastic Bags Can Go Wrong

Good intentions at city hall, bad results for the environment.

Good intentions, bad policy.

Photographer: Cate Gillon/Getty Images

When the city council in Austin, Texas, passed a single-use plastic shopping bag ban in 2013, it assumed environmental benefits would follow. The calculation was reasonable enough: Fewer single-use bags in circulation would mean less waste at city landfills.

Two years later, an assessment commissioned by the city finds that the ban is having an unintended effect –- people are now throwing away heavy-duty reusable plastic bags at an unprecedented rate. The city's good intentions have proven all too vulnerable to the laws of supply and demand.