Not only that, but the plastic in the cap is actually better recyclable one.
Comment on Corporations are saving the planet!
arc99@lemmy.world 3 days ago
I don’t know what % of plastic the cap comprises in a plastic bottle but I bet its double digits. So annoying as it is to use, attaching the cap to the bottle does make sense for recycling. It also lessens litter.
But it needs to be paired up with a deposit refund scheme. Lots of countries do this already and encourages circular economies - the soft drinks companies purchasing recycle material to reuse. I bet those schemes measured a significant jump in recovered plastic when virtually all the caps come back with the bottles.
Nalivai@discuss.tchncs.de 3 days ago
arc99@lemmy.world 2 days ago
The cap and the bottle in soft drinks are made of PET. Most deposit schemes will accept plastic (PET), or aluminium and a machine will separate and sort the material into the appropriate bin. Cans get melted down, plastic is stripped, washed, turned into pellets and fed back into hoppers that make new bottles. Because it’s all the same plastic material it can be ground up into pellets and fed back into a machine to make new bottles. The biggest issue is probably that caps are usually black, red, blue or whatever so I imagine somewhere in the process the chopped up plastic goes past cameras that sort fragments by colour.
Nalivai@discuss.tchncs.de 1 day ago
I remember last time I checked, the bottles and the caps usually had different RICs, but I’m not an expert, so I can be mistaken
Tja@programming.dev 3 days ago
Annoying? Am I the only one who thinks it’s more convenient? The cap cannot fall, you can open it one handed, you cannot lose the cap…
Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de 3 days ago
from what i can tell it’s like half a percent of a percent of people who give a singular thought to it beyond “oh they changed it”