HomeNewsOpinionClimate Change: Reusable cups may be creating a new waste problem

Climate Change: Reusable cups may be creating a new waste problem

While the advantages of switching to reusable cups are genuine, they can also be surprisingly slight, and dependent upon aspects of usage that few of us think much about. A reusable cup cleaned in the sink every day for a month and then stuck at the back of the cupboard once Halloween passes may end up having a higher climate impact than the 30 paperboard cups you’d use instead

September 26, 2023 / 09:38 IST
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While the advantages of switching to reusable cups are genuine, they can also be surprisingly slight, and dependent upon aspects of usage that few of us think much about. (Source: Bloomberg)

If Starbucks Corp wants to start reducing the environmental impact of its drinking vessels, its plans for pumpkin spice latte season could be a step in the wrong direction.

The company is planning to move away from using disposable cups by 2030, Associated Press reported last week. All packaging will be reusable, recyclable or compostable by that date, although single-use vessels will still be available until a better long-term solution is found, according to a spokesperson.

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How, then, to consider the range of “hauntingly beautiful Halloween drinkware” it announced earlier this month? There’s a glow-in-the-dark green plastic venti beaker; mugs shaped like pumpkins and skulls; and a six-pack of reusable cups decorated with ghosts and more pumpkins. Before you rush to buy, it’s worth considering a paradox: You may be better off, in environmental terms, getting your cappuccino in standard disposable paperboard.

Most of us think that single-use packaging is one of the most important threats to the environment out there — a consequence of its highly visible presence in our lives. Less obvious are the ways that materials, water and energy can add up to a comparable ecological toll.