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Coca-Cola says 25% of packaging will be reusable by 2030
by AFP Staff Writers
New York (AFP) Feb 11, 2022

Coca-Cola, under pressure from environmentalists over its packaging policies, has pledged to use reusable containers for at least 25 percent of its beverages by 2030.

The soda giant announced the pledge Thursday, saying it would be implemented globally through the glass and plastic bottles it sells to consumers and through the containers used at soda fountains and dispensers.

Refillable containers accounted for about 16 percent of total volumes in 2020, Coca-Cola said.

"Reusable packaging is among the most effective ways to reduce waste, use fewer resources and lower our carbon footprint in support of a circular economy," said Ben Jordan, senior director of packaging and climate at Coca-Cola.

But the coalition #Breakfreefromplastics, which has rated the company the world's top plastic polluter because of its historic use of single-use plastic containers, offered only measured praise.

"Coke's announcement that they are expanding their reusable packaging target globally is definitely a step in the right direction," said Emma Priestland, global corporate campaigns coordinator for the group.

"The company's string of broken promises in the past, however, compels us to welcome this announcement with some skepticism."

The advocacy group As You Sow, which has drafted a shareholder proposal urging greater use of refillable bottles, praised the announcement.

Conrad MacKerron, the group's senior vice president, said he was "pleased" by Coca-Cola's commitment, adding that, "this action has the potential to substantially reduce the amount of single-use plastic bottles used, many of which end up as ocean plastic pollution."

As You Sow said it will undertake additional analysis of the pledge to determine whether to withdraw its shareholder proposal.


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TECH SPACE
Rare earth elements await in waste
Houston TX (SPX) Feb 10, 2022
Rare earth elements are hard to get and hard to recycle, but a flash of intuition led Rice University scientists toward a possible solution. The Rice lab of chemist James Tour reports it has successfully extracted valuable rare earth elements (REE) from waste at yields high enough to resolve issues for manufacturers while boosting their profits. The lab's flash Joule heating process, introduced several years ago to produce graphene from any solid carbon source, has now been applied to three ... read more

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