Exclusive: Campaigners say company’s apparent abandoning of 2030 pledge is a ‘masterclass in greenwashing’
Coca-Cola has been accused of quietly abandoning a pledge to achieve a 25% reusable packaging target by 2030 in what campaigners call a “masterclass in greenwashing”.
The company has been previously found by researchers to be among the world’s most polluting brands when it comes to plastic waste.
In 2022, the company made a promise to have 25% of its drinks sold in refillable or returnable glass or plastic bottles, or in refillable containers that could be filled up at fountains or “Coca-Cola freestyle dispensers”.
But shortly before this year’s global plastics summit, the company deleted the page on its website outlining this promise, and it no longer has a target for reusable packaging.
I'm just going to be unpopular for a minute here and say if you find yourself drinking out of single use disposable containers everyday, take some time to see if you can change that, even a little bit.
The future "goals" listed here are so lame I don't think you can pretend there's a sustainable way for billions of people to have that habit.
I'm not trying to change billions of people's habits, just a few that I know and love :)
But, I don't think I'm alone.
Where is the button I push to dissolve CocaCola? Our pure hatred isn't going to do it.
Everyone wishes they could somehow multiply their own influence over the world, but being just one person is no reason to give in and do what they told you.
Voting once a year with a Coke in your other hand is a recipe for status quo.
While it's a commendable attitude for one person, trying to solve systematic issues by appealing to individuals does not work.
That is exactly what governments and legislature are for.
As I have diabetes I make my own soda. Just buy some good quality flavorings from a reputable shop and add them to club soda ... or, if you like 7-up, just add a few drops of lemon and lime juice to club soda.
For a sweetener I use stevia, but if you want sugar for your drink, boil some water and add a few tablespoons of sugar. Add some of that mix to the club soda mixture, to taste.
Here is in Denmark they are at 100%, because that's our law. As far as I know (as a consumer), it works just fine.
All soda bottles and cans can be returned in (almost?) any store that sells them. When we buy, a small deposit is added. When we return the container, we get the deposit back.
The deposit is adjusted every now and then to keep it small enough to not significantly affect customers buying power, but big enough that most people want the money back.
In Australia they were at 70:30 Recycled:Virgin PET, 30 years ago when I toured the plant, all of their water products are 100% now (but they're pretty flimsy, not sure the mount franklin bottles would hold up under 'shaken up coca coca' pressures)
In 2022, the company made a promise to have 25% of its drinks sold in refillable or returnable glass or plastic bottles, or in refillable containers that could be filled up at fountains or “Coca-Cola freestyle dispensers”.
It's reusable, not recyclable that is the pledge. While recyclable is good, reusable is better.
Denmark doesn't have any laws making it reusable only.
Ah yes, that is an important distinction. Although for now, I'd say recycling instead of trashing is a big improvement. Especially if the trash ends up in nature.
Manufacturers should have been made responsible for ensuring that there was a system in place for their packaging, decades ago. This isn’t a “vote with your dollars” thing - plastic is cheap and has no downsides to the megacorps, only to us and the environment.
The plastic industry has been gaslighting us for decades, in a way that the cigarette industry must be kicking itself watching.
Aluminum with a thin plastic liner. Only glass gets away without any use of plastics, and even they maybe not, as I haven’t seen any bottle caps without some sort of lining lately
Not that this makes it "wrong" but aluminum cans are also plastic cans, they have a liner on the inside of the metal layer that prevents the acidic soda from corroding things and affecting the flavor. Here's a quick demo of it. While it doesn't prevent the Al from being recycled it is single-use plastic, the liner burns off when the can is melted down. Glass has no such need for the liner.
Glass is still the best medium, but it is relatively heavy and fragile - making per-unit costs significantly higher once all factors are accounted for (loss, logistics etc).
While it’s true that a few milligrams of plastic are burned off when cans are recycled - it is still infinitely better for the environment overall than single-use bottles.