Grocery bag, paper

The bottomline is that one piece of Grocery bag, paper uses the following resources, and produces the following pollutions:
Resource or Pollutantsort iconAmountUnitCEII
Oil deposits2.88E-5barrel0.041
Sulfur dioxide pollution0.00057350072998275pound14.026
Nitrogen oxides pollution0.00032783139879488pound5.793
Ash0.0034044462533365pound1.203
Water, fresh0.24275966173448gallon (US)3.145
Liquid waste0.24243465270995gallon (US)8.568
Landfilled waste0.46019714262024pound16.265
Land-9.581838945603E-7acre-0.443
Forest9.6048E-7acre16.424
Methane pollution8.6079848459813E-5pound0.219
Natural gas deposits0.00827986016pound0.047
Recycled waste-0.0010006294040032pound-0
Iron ore deposits1.4827305844736E-6pound1.441e-6
Particulate matter (PM)1.4969332439953E-6pound0.095
Volatile organic compounds (VOCs)1.6160700068509E-5pound5.712
Chemical waste7.2E-8pound2.545e-4
Uranium reserves9.3317664E-7pound0.132
Lead pollution1.5319813899404E-9pound0.01
Mercury pollution2.1501765810546E-9pound0.068
Carbon monoxide pollution1.9709951993001E-5pound0.114
Arsenic pollution2.8310658317219E-9pound0.09
Radioactive waste1.612632435791E-7pound1.026
Carbon dioxide pollution0.14476013613715pound5.116
Dissipation0.28243512909663kWh7.428e-5
Coal deposits0.044796457486576pound0.04
Total CEII: 77.693