• Flying SquidM
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    677 months ago

    The two tobacco companies Altria and Philip Morris International combined made up 2% of the branded plastic litter found, both Danone and Nestlé each produced 3% of it, PepsiCo was responsible for 5% of the discarded packaging, and 11% of branded plastic waste could be traced to the Coca-Cola company.

    Imagine how much plastic waste could be eliminated if Coke and Pepsi just went back to glass bottles?

    • ForestOrca
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      137 months ago

      Imagine how much plastic waste could be eliminated if we just boycotted these companies.

      • Flying SquidM
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        237 months ago

        You are going to have a much harder time convincing people to give up on their soda addiction than you are finding a way to get the soda addicts to get Coke and Pepsi to switch back to glass.

        • ForestOrca
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          67 months ago

          Perhaps so, alas. And the rates of obesity and diabetes continue to rise. sigh.

          • Flying SquidM
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            67 months ago

            That’s the thing about addiction. You keep using even though it’s really bad for you.

        • @[email protected]
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          17 months ago

          Cans exist? I haven’t bought a bottle of soda pop in god knows how long. Cans or bust.

            • RBG
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              27 months ago

              Probably less than a bottle and cans get recycled for aluminium, which probably means the plastic gets burned off.

              Not saying that’s great but in comparison it is better.

    • @[email protected]
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      67 months ago

      Is glass litter better?

      We should also account for extra emissions due to higher weight and lower density in transportation. Glass is significantly heavier, and you need more of it per item for the same strength, so you’ll be moving fewer total bottles per truckload.

      Aluminum is also recyclable, durable, light, and cheap, though I don’t know if aluminum litter is better than plastic. I assume it is since I’ve not heard of micro-aluminum causing environmental damage (yet).

      • @[email protected]
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        117 months ago

        Aluminium and glass is close to infinitely recyclable.

        Better yet, glass bottles can be reused up to 7 times.

        But it costs more than a returnable plastic bottle. Which obviously costs more than a sturdy as a trashbag plastic bottle.

        • @[email protected]
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          7 months ago

          Glass isn’t easy to recycle because just a little bit of the wrong stuff can mess up a batch.

          It is reusable, though, and you can shatter it and get aggregate for concrete which is getting rare these days as all the obvious places to get sand from, such as deserts, have grains that are way too round. In that case it doesn’t matter if there’s the occasional mug or drinking glass or window pane in the recycling, concrete doesn’t care.

          PET is actually excellent for recycling provided that you actually recycle it, i.e. have a deposit scheme that works. Like the German 25ct/bottle one. Provides a very clean recycling stream, the product is light and doesn’t use much volume at all when shipped to the bottling plant (they’re expanding the bottles on site), etc. Also, nature apparently is learning how to break up PET.

            • @[email protected]
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              27 months ago

              Ah, so this was about melting the bottle down and making a new bottle 7 times? As opposed to washing the bottle and reusing it as it was. Makes much more sense now. :)

      • Flying SquidM
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        97 months ago

        Glass litter? Not necessarily, but glass is essentially infinitely recyclable, unlike plastic.

      • @[email protected]
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        67 months ago

        Unfortunately the coating they put on the inside of alu cans is pretty terrible so they are slightly less good than glass in that regard

      • @[email protected]
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        7 months ago

        We should also account for extra emissions due to higher weight and lower density in transportation.

        That’s more a consequence of business efforts to minimize labor costs. There’s very little reason not to produce, recycle, and dispose of glass waste locally, unless you’re trying to leverage cheap fossil fuel energy in order to get around the domestic wage rates.