HomeNewsOpinionEnvironment: Your coffee cup needs a climate rating, too

Environment: Your coffee cup needs a climate rating, too

As the world’s production of packaging waste rises to developed-country levels of about 200 kilograms per person, governments are going to have to play a bigger role in helping people make sense of this mess

September 11, 2023 / 10:42 IST
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The most environmentally-conscious solution to the problem of iced-coffee packaging is normally going to be avoiding waste altogether. (Source: Bloomberg)

Here’s a quick game for the climate-conscious. Try ranking these disposable beverage containers from least to most environmentally friendly: aluminum; glass; paperboard; plastic bottle; plastic pouch.

Unless you’re an expert in the subject, it’s likely that your answers are a long way from reality. That’s a problem. Packaging is a $1 trillion market that generates hundreds of millions of metric tons of waste every year — but our ideas about it are often based more on hunches than solid information. As the world’s production of packaging waste rises to developed-country levels of about 200 kilograms (440 pounds) per person, governments are going to have to play a bigger role in helping people make sense of this mess.

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Take the minor kerfuffle in the US this summer after coffee shops started handing out iced coffee in flexible plastic pouches, rather than rigid cups. Such packaging is common in Africa, Asia, and Latin America, and the trend may owe something to the vogue for all things Korean. It’s still left many Americans affronted and confused. “I just paid $7.50 for this IV bag of iced coffee,” wrote one affronted TikTok user, @nolitadirtbag.

The “colostomy bags” are “allegedly supposed to be more environmentally sustainable,” another user, @crelyea12, said in a post with more than 175,000 likes. “How? In what way? I’m sorry, Captain Planet himself told us that plastic bags are bad,” he added (a reference to a 1990s environmental superhero cartoon.)