Spyke
discuss.online

Ban plastic for consumables, glass and cardboard forever!!!

105
vivendireply
programming.dev

Glass soda bottles just hit different™ I would pay extra if it's an option

43
Nailbarreply
sopuli.xyz

They do, but you're not supposed to hit people with them.

34
Korhakareply
sopuli.xyz

Glass is a verb isn't it? What else would you do with them.

10

Yes, but not the one I was initially thinking of. I am also British.

2
albert180reply
piefed.social

Here you can get them at most grocery stores. It's also usually the standard for German Brands, it's mostly Coca Cola Brands that are sold in Single-Use-Plastic

10

Not in Iran. Only some restaurants, mostly old school ones carry them now. They also take the bottle back, send it to the factory, where they are cleaned and filled again.

8
Redredmereply
lemmy.world

Err, the fact that you get a deposit back when returning the bottles means they're most certainly NOT single use.

PET flasks are very easily recycled. Easier then glass. There is a whole industry built on it!

Here in NL we've had this system for as long as i can remember. (Im over 50)

5
albert180reply
piefed.social

Err, wrong. Every Bottle in Germany has a deposit on them. 25ct for Single Use PET 15ct for Multi-Use PET and Glass Bottles

And Use refers to the amount of times they get refilled until the material gets recycled.

7

So..we say the same thing? The bottle or the materials get reused when there is a deposit?

1
huppakeereply
lemm.ee

Not disposable is what you mean I think, the pet bottles aren't refilled so they actually are recycled unlike beer bottles which are reused and not single use (mehrweg in german). The term is a bit confusing because it is also used to describe stuff like plastic bags, cutlery and 'paper' cups (you bin those after using it once)

3

I've stopped drinking from plastic bottles completely. And glass bottled soda is so rare here that I buy it whenever I come across it.

Sadly my preferred brand of cider recently changed from glass bottles to plastic ones, so I'm looking around.

4
Kazumarareply
discuss.tchncs.de

In case you didn't know, I think you might like to know: In Germany they also do reusable PET and reusable glass.

21
accideathreply
feddit.org

Nah, there are a lot of glass and plastic bottles that do get reused a couple of times. You can oftentimes even spot a characteristic ring of scratch marks from the machines that process, clean and refill the bottles.

Typical „Mehrwegflaschen“ are

  • Beer bottles (glass)
  • Milk bottles (glass)
  • Lemonade bottles (glass)
  • Water bottles (glass and plastic)
  • Coca-Cola/Fanta/Sprite bottles (glass and plastic)
  • Yoghurt cups (glass)

There are multiple standardised types and sizes that are used by a multitude of brands. They are not recycled but reused. (Well, they do get recycled, once they are either broken or show heavy signs of use. The „Normbrunnenflasche“, the 0,7L standard bottle for water, for example, gets refilled about 100 times.)

And of course there is the „Pfand“ (deposit) system: Depending on the type of bottle, you usually pay a 8ct or 15ct deposit on the bottles. The system works pretty well.

Of course, there’s also a lot of one way bottles. Those usually have a 25ct deposit and are not reusable but get recycled instead. They’re usually also being brought back to the store, people want their 25ct back after all. (And yes, I know a lot of them aren’t actually recycled but end up at a landfill all the same).

And of course, there are also a lot of glass bottles that are not being reused and instead recycled by default like wine bottles or some non-standard types.

38
Zacryonreply
feddit.org

And yes, I know a lot of them aren’t actually recycled but end up at a landfill all the same

Really? Got a source on that? I know that we're still not that good in recycling plastics in general, But last time I checked the quota of PET recycling was quite high.

2

Thanks to the deposit-return system, recycling rates for PET bottles in Germany are indeed very high. Over 97% actually (which is quite awesome). Still leaves a few percent that aren’t, which is still a lot of plastic but we’re way above average.

In the USA for example, only about a third of PET bottles get actually recycled. The rest heads to the landfill or the burner.

For the yellow bag in Germany btw. (our trash system for plastic and compound packaging, tin cans, aluminium foil, etc.), the recycling rate is about two thirds in total.

2
Kacarottreply
aussie.zone

I mean, they get collected, washed, and reused. Not sure why the sarcasm about it?

15
kassiopaeareply
lemmy.blahaj.zone

Well, here in California we've decided that most stores are mandated to provide "reusable" plastic shopping bags (at a cost of $0.10 each) which are more durable and made of a thicker plastic.

I don't know a single person that treats them as any less disposable than the thin plastic bags they replaced. There is little to no information or infrastructure supporting recycling them.

I'm just glad the stores around here give paper bags if you ask for them.

2
Synapsereply
lemmy.world

Some PET bottles are reusable in Germany, and the scuff marks are a very clear sign some of these bottles have been used a good dozen times.

It's not all bottles though, many will be crushed and recycled (I hope).

9

Dude, >98% of the Bottles in Germany get recycled, and thanks to the deposit system they get pure PET out of it which is well recyclable.

Plastic pollution is a big problem. PET Bottles in Western Europe aren't a part of it. Other plastics are

7
albert180reply
piefed.social

Dude, why are you spreading bullshit when it's quite obvious you have no clue?

2
lemmy.zip

There is no such thing as an indefinitely recyclable plastic. The best kind can only be recycled a few times.

-3
BussyCatreply
lemmy.world

Reusable is different than recyclable. They mentioned reusable plastic as in you make it out of a thicker material and only wash it in between uses so that by the time it’s actually damaged enough to be recycled it’s been used many times

11

That’s not where all our microplastics are coming from, the much bigger concern is driving cars which leaches a bunch of microplastics from the tires that end up in our waterways. By reusing the plastics you have less deliveries so less microplastics in your local water supply

6

You're constantly moving Goalposts. Point is, "Mehrweg"-Bottles in Germany are getting refilled, and they are more environmentally friendly than the single use ones. The PET-Multiuse even more so because they have smaller transport emissions thanks to the smaller weight

5
lemmy.world

Glass bottles aren’t a free win. Glass is very heavy to transport and extremely energy-intensive to manufacture. It made sense back when people hardly drank any soda. It still makes sense for things like condiments (soy sauce, vinegar, etc) and alcoholic drinks but it doesn’t make any sense for everyday drinks like water or soda.

We should be investing in better municipal water treatment facilities so that tap water doesn’t taste awful. Where I live the tap water is horrible but I’ve visited places where the tap water tastes perfectly clean and pleasant. If we had universally tasty tap water then people would stop buying plastic water bottles.

As for soda, I could see glass bottles being excellent if we could bring consumption down to a reasonable level. Many people guzzle soda as if it were water which is both terrible for their health and the environment.

1
howrarreply
lemmy.ca

Where glass wins big is in reusability. We need to get people to refill/reuse their glass bottles rather than recycling them.

1

Yes, it’s just hard to do, especially for people without a car. Hauling a large number of heavy glass bottles to the grocery store on public transit is quite a burden!

1
grrgylereply
slrpnk.net

What did people use before plastic? Glass and cardboard!

5
discuss.tchncs.de

Glass Recycling costs way more energy than plastic recycling.

But in Germany we reuse bottles too, probably the most effective.

5

You cannot use cardboard for liquids. There are containers that have a cardboard exterior – just tear them, and you'll find out they are made out of a sandwich material with an interior layer of plastic, meddle layer of aluminium and exterior cardboard. almist unrecyclable.

4
lemmy.zip

I believe it uses a lot of water and isn't really safe for food consumption, and for preserving food

1
grrgylereply
slrpnk.net

Is there nothing better for the environment than plastic at least?

2

Short distribution channels would be the best

Else, fruits and food that don’t really need packaging because they have a natural bacteria barrier, or something similar

But yea I don’t see any good sanitary alternative. Since we’re bound to get microplastics I guess reusable containers that are only washed and reused a couple of times would be beneficial, at the cost of a little more microplastics.

Some kind of paper to a certain extend for some things, but yea, nothing is as good as plastic :(

Don’t use plastic where you don’t need to. And then maybe use cardboard+thin plastic for the rest: less recyclable, but less plastic 🤔. Depends on the route you want to choose: less pollution or less plastic waste

1
lemmy.zip

I read it as "ban glass and cardboard as well"

Unfortunately they also pollute quite a bit, and cardboard isn't really safe for consumption. How do you store meat for example? Metal cans are expensive, and glass is expensive, fragile and heavy, making it a worse option, as weight has strong impacts.

3
grrgylereply
slrpnk.net

I was actually just thinking of bottles, because that's what the op is about. So like just for beverages. I already get almost all of my beverages in cardboard, so it's actually possible.

1
thisfroreply
slrpnk.net

Beverage in cardbord? It's still just plastic on top of it

2
grrgylereply
slrpnk.net

I thought at least some of it was wax... but what did people drink out of before plastic was invented?? I'm not saying we have to regress technologically, but surely this is a solved problem.

2

People would make their own beverages (mostly beer and wine, as alcohol was the only preservant working) and use barrels to store them and mugs to drink them. After the development of pasteurization they would pasteurize juice and keep it in glass bottles. And they would share with neighbours, family and friends.

Of course there were breweries and wineries, too, they would sell their stuff mostly in barrels to pubs, and people would buy their beer and wine at the pub if they couldn't make their own. In our area it was a common task for children to get a mug of beer for dad from the pub until the 50s, I think.

Pre-fabricated, non-alcoholic, bottled beverages are a modern luxury item we all got used to as normal.

2

Glass, stainless steel I guess.

Use a water bottle in stainless steel: safe to drink from and to wash, not really heavy, and keeps the temperature. Stainless steel is for reusable containers, but I’m not sure you can recycle it easily and efficiently. It’s also a bit expensive.

Glass is infinitely recyclable but it needs a lot of energy to be produced and recycled (you need to heat it a lot), is fragile, relatively expensive, and a lot is needed to make a good container, so it gets heavy, which might outweigh the positives sides it has.

2

There are no cardboard container for liquids — cardboard soaks and dissolves in water. What you are likely refering to is tetrapak, a compound material made of plastic, aluminium and cardboard. I think I've seen packages using only plastic coated cardboard without aluminium as well. You can test it yourself: just rip it apart and you can examine the layers of the compound material.

I don't know about the impact of production — paper production still destroys woods, needs lots of water and energy, aluminium needs tons of energy. Probably better than glass and worse than PET?

Transportationwise they are as good as PET, probably better.

Regarding recycling they are a nightmare, it's almost impossible, because you have to separate the three layers which are designed to stick together. Tetrapak claims they are recycling them, but this technique is fairly new and I've got no idea how well it works and how sustainable it is.

1

China did it, they limit the use of plastics in consumer products and have a standard for rigorous recycling and reuse

1

At max that's 5.95 an hour or at minimum 3.96 an hour. Kinda shitty pay, and 60% of what was recycled was just burned anyway. That numbers for Germany BTW where it's the highest in the world. On average less than 9 percent gets to be new plastic worldwide.

The weight loss is good to see though. Excersize is good for your body and spirit

Anyway next I'm off to tell some kids Santa isn't real and that the tooth fairy is just their already poor parents giving them money to have them believe there's magic in this world preserving their sense of wonder a little while longer.

31
nyankasreply
lemmy.ml

Oh boy, here I go ranting against misinformation about recycling again.

Your claim that 60% of these bottles will be burned is false. The recycling quota for single-use plastic bottles in Germany is 97.6% (2023; source).

60% was the quota of all non-recycled plastic packaging material combined, back in 2018. This quota has further decreased since, and is now at about 30% (2023, source), so almost 70% of all plastic packaging in Germany is recycled. It's still not perfect, but far, far better than just burning everything.

Recycling isn't an easy and cheap process, but it can definitely work and be steadily improved, if it's properly implemented. I'm so tired of this dumb suggestion, that recycling is bad because it's not perfect (or, in the case of the US, full of corruption). Every bit of plastic that isn't polluting the environment is a win. And recycling is definitely helping with that. As opposed to propagating false information on the internet.

112
Jumireply
lemmy.world

So separating my plastics when I bring them to the Wertstoffhof actually makes sense? I never bothered because I've always been told it gets all thrown together anyway.

11

Wow, someone should lose their citizenship. Go back to Belgium with that barbarity.

2
Redexreply
lemmy.world

People's main gripe with it is that a huge percentage of plastic has traditionally just been separated and then would either still end up in a landfill or sent to China or wherever to recycle. I don't know however how much of a case that is still.

4
feddit.org

Do they still count energetic recycling (aka burning in a power plant) as recycling?

1
nyankasreply
lemmy.ml

According to the second source „energy recovery“ isn‘t included in this statistic.

6
feddit.org

So — though using collected plastic as fuel feels sort of cheating — the percentage of plastic that is put to any use after use is even higher.

1

If I understand that article correctly, this should be the case, yes. Unfortunately I'm unable to find any official statistics on that matter.

1

You’re forgetting the person is also making the streets a cleaner place, having fun ( I enjoy picking litter), great for mental health, and choose your own hours.

31

Right. Like, framing this by saying they could have made the money faster kind of misses the point. They went outside, exercised, improved their health, and enjoyed themselves. Honestly, the great irony here is that they bought a PS5 with the money, which will encourage them to be sedentary inside.

2

That's complete Bullshit. PET which is what these bottles are made of has a recycling quote of 98% and over half of the PET used in the production of new bottles is coming from recycled bottles

14

As the other commenter said, the bottles actually get recycled; if they weren't they wouldn't have a system where they pay for the return. And it doesn't make sense to count it as "pay", as in compare to a normal job pay, cause it's not. Dude is walking around and cleaning the environment, gets free PS5 out of it.

7

That lazy fucker should come down more often and to their own work.

2

If they're already working a full time job and just need the little extra money to get buy something nice for themselves, the pay is kinda irrelevant. Far simpler than on-boarding for a part time job you'll only need for 3 weeks.

2
lemm.ee

You get 25c?? We only get 15c, not worth the PS level effort.

16

Here in Arkansas, I don't know any "trash" that you can pick up for a deposit. I think when I was a small child in the 80s you could do glass bottles, but when plastic came in that ended. As a teen, and up to maybe a decade ago, you could get paid for aluminum scrap (by weight), but both of the metal recycling places in my county (Polk) do not pay for aluminum anymore (they will accept it, but not pay for it).

6

You don't get anything: you pay 25 cents (for some glass bottles it's 15, for some 8) when you buy the drink and you might get your own money back if you bring it to the supermarket, they accept it, and the machine is working at the time. It's a scam.

0

Nah. Fuck the Pfand system. I don't like being fined for a crime I haven't committed (not recycling the bottle) with the excuse of "you'll get your fine back when you return the bottle"

-1
feddit.nl

Here we get 3 cents for every bottle. I don't think I'll be buying a PS5 anytime soon.

7

Seriously, if you got a bunch for every four bottles around here it'd take a couple of years and a shoe change to find enough of them to fund a PS5

1
lemm.ee

Government should increase the buy-back price even if it means increasing the initial costs. At least they'll return it. I think glass and aluminium are still better than plastic, unless ofcourse, profit and comfort. Population is still the ultimate cause of all, humans don't understand that Earth can't handle it.

6
Salehreply
feddit.org

Reusable glass bottles have their own issues, especially emissions from logistics if they are transported for longer distances.

Cleaning reusable bottles is energy intensive and uses a lot of water and chemicals. Melting and recycling glass is certainly more resource intensive than doing the same with plastics.

The best solutions to reduce resource intensity is local production and consumers bringing their own containers, going for dried instead of canned when it comes to fruits, beans and the like...

11
Noodle07reply
lemmy.world

Know what ? Gimme cola flavor soda powder in bulk and I'll solve all of those problems except for like my morning fruit juice but that I can get locally.

1
lemmy.world

Water is all anyone needs, though if you're talking about a food service business I suppose you have no choice.

2
neonsreply
lemmy.dbzer0.com

Glass Bottles are way too heavy and fragile.

But refill stations where you can refill your metal bottle and pay per litre would be a nice idea.

5

I like the ones that have a counter showing how many plastic bottles have been saved by refilling at the station

3
nshibjreply
lemmy.world

Nah, in Germany you're not paid for cleaning anything. You aren't getting any money: you are fined 25 cents (for some glass bottles it's 15, for some 8) when you buy the drink in case you don't recycle. You might get that money back if you bring the bottle back to the supermarket, they accept it, and the return machine is working at the time. It's a scam.

-3
PokerChipsreply
programming.dev

That"s not a scam. It's a solution. Take care of your Earth.

Unless the store is pocketing the money. I'm assuming the credit is going to a government program or non profit organization.

8

I’m assuming the credit is going to a government program or non profit organization.

Not really. It's complicated.

Basically all of the money is being shuffled between importers/manufacturers, stores and consumers.

Germany has about 95-98% return rate for the bottles (mainly because it's somewhat lucrative to collect them). So very little money is left over.

There's a company called DPG that is responsible to make sure that no part of the system is profiting of it unfairly

Germany wikipedia (annoyingly only available in german) https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pfand_auf_Einweggetr%C3%A4nkebeh%C3%A4lter_in_Deutschland

All in all, it's a net benefit. I remember the time before this system, and you had drink cans littered around everywhere. Ever since the system is in place, I can count the amount of littered cans (e.g. cans that are too crushed to be returned) on maybe one hand

5
nshibjreply
lemmy.world

Absolutely! Take care of your earth! But you don't need to fine people for a loitering crime they haven't committed. Not all bottles have Pfand in Germany: soft drinks? Yes, juice? No, beer? Yes, wine? No. It's a hypocritical bullshit system.

0

Don't see how this is a fine. Take it back. Get your rebate. And bonus is that i don't have to walk through your trash.

2
Obelixreply
feddit.org

It's a deposit system that works as a deposit system. And it's purpose is to decrease the amount of bottles that get thrown into the streets and that does totally work. Just compare how many bottles are lying around in Germany to other countries.

2
nshibjreply
lemmy.world

No, it's not: it's a fine you pay because it's assumed you'll litter some bottles: not all bottles have Pfand, which is nonsense: soda yes, juice not.

And the number of bottles lying around? Germans come back from Spain praising how clean the streets are and Spain has no Pfand system. That's just not true.

1

Juice has Pfand sine 2022. You might want to check if you have throwing away a Playstation 5 all this time ;)

1
lemmy.world

recycling plastic releases even more microplastics. ban plastic

-1
Avicennareply
lemmy.world

yea this is a logical fallacy, because nowhere did I say this guy does something that is worse than littering. reducing plastic usage is the most effective way of combating plastic pollution and I would like to see anyone claim we dont use plastic redundantly because it is cheap and convenient.

-1
JackbyDevreply
programming.dev

nowhere did I say this guy does something that is worse than littering

Huh?

I collected over 2000 bottles

recycling plastic releases even more microplastics

Certainly sounds like you're saying people shouldn't collect litter.

Look, I get it. Plastics suck. Plastic companies are bullshit and twist shit around to make the consumer out to be the bad guy. But when you said recycling releases even more microplastics in response to someone saying they collected over 2000 pieces of trash it sounds like you're saying they shouldn't do that. That isn't a logical fallacy, that is how communication works. An activity was mentioned and you criticized the activity. It is reasonable to assume you mean they shouldn't have done the activity.

If that's not what you intend then you should say something like "collecting litter is good, ..." to make it clear that you aren't saying they shouldn't have collected litter.

6
Avicennareply
lemmy.world

Ok, what I meant is it releases even more plastic on top of (maybe more than) producing it. Recycling plastic is not the magical solution it was once presented to us. Yes we all have recycling engrained to our spinal cords since primary education but unfortunately it is not the solution, it is a bandaid that is having difficulty covering up for the horrible consumption habits.

We already know a ridiculous amount of microplastics is accumulating in human brain tissue:

"Brain samples, all derived from the frontal cortex, exhibited substantially higher concentrations of MNPs than liver or kidney (two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA), P < 0.0001), but comparable to recently published Py-GC/MS data from carotid plaques4, with a median of 3345 µg g−1 (25–75%: 1,267–5,213 µg g−1) in 2016 samples and 4917 µg g−1 (25–75%: 4,026–5,608 µg g−1) in 2024 samples"

doi: 10.1038/s41591-024-03453-1

If it turns out to be damaging to internal organs as well, we may have lost too much time on not impactful enough practices like recycling and soon pass the point of no return (given an exponential growth of microplastic pollution). So I don't have any patience for "recycle your plastic to save the world and win great prizes" type feel good stories.

0
lemmy.ml

Plastic is just the next stage of evolution. Once our brains are replaced entirely with plastic we'll enter a new era, no longer inhibited by our disgusting flesh.

4

Just fucking upload my consciousness to a hard drive and yeet me into space already (put an off switch though).

1
JackbyDevreply
programming.dev

I think you're fundamentally missing my point. Litter exists. Someone cleaned it. When you respond by criticizing it, you're just making it sound like you'd rather them leave the litter where it is. I am 100% aware plastics are a problem. You don't need to share sources. I told you I was on the same page with regards to that.

3

I think we can all agree

littering << not recycling < recycling << reducing plastic usage

and all the first message is a strongly worded reminder of the last two relations, it is not meant to claim recycling ~ littering or recycling<littering.

Why would I criticise someone picking litter from the streets, that does not make any sense. It is a parallel thread on the topic of recycling. Take this message as a correction to the first message if you will.

1
Obelixreply
feddit.org

I really would like to know how you came to that conclusion. The OP is from Germany and is collecting abandoned bottles in the street and there are closed loop recycling programs in place. You return the bottle to the store, you get your 25 cents back, the bottle gets crushed and recycled into a new one. That kind of does work. Multiuse bottles are better, but I really struggle to understand how "Picking up discarded plastic bottles" releases more microplastics than letting those bottles out in the environment where they will become 100% microplastic

2

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/may/23/recycling-can-release-huge-quantities-of-microplastics-study-finds

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2772416623000803

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0269749124005694

This really seems like the kind of situation where you fix one crack and another one pops elsewhere.

Not to mention, car tyres are possibly also one of the highest contributers to microplastics so we might as well be fucked.

edit: maybe my initial post was worded in a confusing way read my update above if you are interested

4

Not to mention, the production takes petroleum. It's also not recyclable multiple times.

1
lemm.ee

Maybe they do work and barely get by and so they did this part time each day for extra spending money.

12
lemmy.zip

I’m just saying that doesn’t really sound efficient, I’m not trying to be a dick

-2
Zacryonreply
feddit.org

Not everything in life needs to be financially efficient.

5
lemmy.blahaj.zone

What if they live somewhere that the people upstairs toss their bottles down off the balcony? Checkmate Liberal!

1
lemmy.zip

2-3 hours a day

Then I would worry about OP's health

Else, then you discovered an IRL exploit to get rich

(I know this was not meant seriously)

1
lemmy.blahaj.zone

Landlords hate this one simple trick, pay your rent with only 2-3 hours a work per day.

I'm not sure why the landlord's would hate this but that's what my brain came up with.

1

To be fair that’s the state of many people rn. The rest goes for food and other expenses, and savings

2