René Heiden pulls two glass yoghurt jars off the shop shelf, and lists the nearby supermarkets in which they can be returned once empty. His Berlin grocery shop avoids single-use packaging in favour of reusable containers, a waste reduction model that is having something of a revival in Germany. But it’s surprisingly hard to get right.
It's something we could do with over here, in place of the huge number of different bins our councils inflict on us. Or the infuriating new bottle caps.
“You need a range of packaging to make it as convenient as possible for the consumer,” says Heiden. An oil bottle, for example, needs a thin neck and a small spout to help it drip – “you would never put yoghurt in one of those”. Marmalade and spreads, on the other hand, work best in cylindrical jars that a knife can fully scrape.
We used to recycle glass bottles - doorstep milk deliveries, soda bottles returnable for money. Why don't we bring that back?
“I’m seeing more and more products that use reusable packaging,” says Heiden, who has devoted a wall of his shop Samariter Unverpackt to dispensers of grains and cereals from which customers can fill home-brought containers. “But I also see some producers who are trying to expand, but have to go back because the handling costs are too high.”
Then surely tax breaks would help?
“The best packaging is the one you don’t produce,” says Nathan Dufour, who leads efforts to promote reuse systems at the campaign group Zero Waste Europe. If you need to use it – for hygiene reasons, say – “then that packaging needs to stay in the loop for as long as possible”. Germany has a head start on many of its neighbours with its bottle deposit schemes, in which customers are charged a bit more upfront for their purchase – whether fancy juice from an organic store or cheap beer from an off-licence – and given the money back when they return the empty glass.
If the efficient Germans can do it, why can't we>
10 comments:
We were in Serbia a couple of months ago. We went in an 'off licence' and selected some beers, but the guy would not sell them to us. After some assistance from an English speaking customer, it turns out you can only buy those beers if you bring in an equal number of empty bottles to exchange.
He pointed us in the direction of some other beers in smaller bottles that we were allowed to buy.
We never got to find out how we get hold of empty bottles in the first place.
"We never got to find out how we get hold of empty bottles in the first place."
No doubt there are officials who can, for a fee, facilitate the acquisition of empty bottles. It's got to be hard for a start up brewer to grow an off-sales business.
"the handling costs are too high." "Then surely tax breaks would help?"
That only shifts who pays. The costs are higher than the value produced so we are poorer.
As to the attached bottle caps: It may be a small inconvenience but multiplied by the number of times you open a bottle it is very annoying. First thing I do is cut the attachment off. So that bit of plastic is thrown away whereas before it did not even exist.
I attended a martial arts contest in Sweden back in the 1980s. You could take empty aluminium drink cans to the supermarket and feed them into a machine that would give you money for them.
"We never got to find out how we get hold of empty bottles in the first place."
There's a bus shelter near me which has(had?) lots of empty beer bottles concealed in a gap between the roof timbers and the brick wall. I can't tell you how they got there...
"You could take empty aluminium drink cans to the supermarket and feed them into a machine that would give you money for them"
I collect cans, foil & other ally, along with old car batteries, copper pipe & wire. When I've got a couple of sacks full I make a trip to the local scrap man. You'd be surprised how the monetary value soon adds up.
I used to work in a job that produced a moderate amount of non ferrous scrap. It was a perk of the job that we could take it to the scrap dealer and share the proceeds between the lads in the workshop. One time we had been really busy and hadn't had time to make the trip and ended up with a pretty big haul, just as scrap metal prices were pretty high. We didn't let on how much we got for our weigh in that time.
Stonyground.
"We didn't let on how much we got for our weigh in that time"
I worked in a boatyard for a few years, and (with permission) collected the metal scrap that was otherwise just thrown in the skip. I acquired the nickname "Steptoe" but one day pointed out that my little sideline paid twice the hourly rate the yard did. That stopped the snide remarks...
The worst thing that happened in my job was the banning of aluminium laughing gas canisters. We made out like bandits collecting them. The steel ones that are everywhere around Bradistan aren't worth the hassle
"...it turns out you can only buy those beers if you bring in an equal number of empty bottles to exchange."
That sounds like a good idea!
"No doubt there are officials who can, for a fee, facilitate the acquisition of empty bottles."
Heh!
"That only shifts who pays. The costs are higher than the value produced so we are poorer."
True enough, but there must be value in some things to make it worth the while?
"As to the attached bottle caps: It may be a small inconvenience but multiplied by the number of times you open a bottle it is very annoying. First thing I do is cut the attachment off. So that bit of plastic is thrown away whereas before it did not even exist."
I find it bizarre that it's been implemented for what must surely be such a small amount of potential litter?
"You could take empty aluminium drink cans to the supermarket and feed them into a machine that would give you money for them."
Excellent idea!
" You'd be surprised how the monetary value soon adds up."
For those things that have some value.
"It was a perk of the job that we could take it to the scrap dealer..."
Wow! A perk worth having.
"...but one day pointed out that my little sideline paid twice the hourly rate the yard did."
😮
"We made out like bandits collecting them."
Aluminum seems to have and hold value over any other tupe of scrap...
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