I'm a Quality Engineer for an injection molding company and have worked in the plastics industry for 15 years. Your question is a little more complicated then it sounds.
For starters plastics can be made in many different ways. And with that their are many different polymers on the market. Because of this I will try to answer your question the best I can.
Start with the gallon jug, or for that matter any plastic bottle. The process that makes that is called blow molding. A slug of liquified material is injected with a gas to form the hollow chamber. Most plastic jugs are made of polypropylene which has a lot of lubricants in it. It's the elastic polymer which makes it flexible to withstand breaking. These are low melt materials.
Injection molding heats the resin into a soft liquid to be injected into a mold and form a shape. This process allows solid parts to be formed. It also allows you to mold harder and higher tensile materials such as nylon and other materials made for your car. Some resins have glass fibers in them which make them hard and it's the glass fiber which gives it a grainy look to it. Melt temperature here can go up to 750 degrees.
Not all plastics have carbon in them. Most do but not all. There are materials which melt like plastic, inject like liquid and after being baked act like metal. (MIM) is metal injection molding and it's expensive.
Garbage bags for instance are made like paper from pulp. The plastics are rolled through a press to a thin material and then bonded into garbage bags. You can't take a gallon jug and make it into a garbage bag. It's like apples to oranges. All different technique to it.
Everything is biodegradeable but the length of time to decompose can vary on the materials chemical property.