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German solution to single-use coffee cups

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If you’ve been following green initiatives for a while now, then you know the common enemy that is the disposable cup. Whether getting a coffee, smoothie, or fountain soda, paper, plastic and styrofoam disposable cups are everywhere. And after using them to drink your single beverage, they’re thrown away and either remain in a landfill for years, or slowly decompose and leach toxins into the environment.

The easy answer to solve this problem is to forgo the disposable cup in favor of a reusable one that you carry with you, conveniently available for all your beverage holding needs. But we all know that the reality of that is often harder than it sounds. Remembering your cup is a challenge, and sometimes you just need that midday caffeine pick-me-up. So you guiltily use the paper cup, and throw it away.

Knowing this struggle is real, the German city Freiburg has taken it upon themselves to provide citizens with an easy reusable cup system. Rather than expecting its residents to bring their own, or buy a brand new one on the spot, Freiburg has created the Freiburg Cup, a hard plastic to-go cup with a disposable lid that customers can obtain with a €1 deposit and return to any one of the 100 participating businesses across the city.

Participating stores have an identifying green sticker in the window. When you return the cup, these stores will disinfect and reuse the cups, which can be reused up to 400 times.

This reusable cup option is particularly relevant in Germany where approximately 300,000 cups of coffee are consumed per hour, using 2.8 billion coffee cups a year, all of which are used for an average of 13 minutes before being tossed out.

While this creates a lot of waste on the backend—i.e. cups clogging landfills—it’s also environmentally unfriendly to produce this many cups. According to a study conducted by Starbucks and the Alliance for the Environmental Innovation, each paper cup manufactured is responsible for 0.24 lbs of CO2 emissions. Each 16oz paper cups also requires 33 grams of wood, 4.1 grams of petroleum, 1.8 grams of chemicals, 650 BTU’s of energy and almost a gallon of water to produce.

 Source: WEF

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