It is time as consumers to support those companies who get good grades. Agree?
Food Industry has long way to go when it comes to using recyclable and compostable packaging
Let's face it: We are people who consume many of our meals
on the go. That means we're not eating on real plates or bowls but out of
plastic containers and paper boxes. And perhaps daily, we drink our coffees and
sodas out of plastic or plastic-lined paper cups.
Overall, Americans recycle at the lamentable rate of 34.5
percent and recycle plastic packaging at the even measlier rate of 14 percent.
So the majority of that food packaging is ending up in landfills, or on the
street as litter, where it may eventually get swept into the ocean. There, our
wrappers and cans and cups become a much bigger problem — a direct threat to
marine life that may ingest it and die.
According to a report
published Thursday by the environmental groups As You Sow and the Natural
Resources Defense Council, most of the major players in the restaurant and
beverage industry are not doing a whole lot to ameliorate this problem. There's
a big onus on the makers of packaged foods and beverages to reduce plastic and
paper waste and also make it easier for us to recycle and compost the materials
we use.
"What are companies doing to show that they have a
personal and financial responsibility to promote recycling? [We found]
relatively weak examples of leadership," Andrew Behar, CEO of As
You Sow, a group that promotes environmental and social corporate
responsibility, told reporters Thursday. "This industry has a long way to
go."
The two NGOs surveyed and analyzed 47 companies based on
what they call the "four pillars of packaging sustainability": source
reduction, or switching to reusable packaging; recycled content; recyclability
and materials use; and boosting materials recycling. None of the 47 companies,
which included big players in fast food, beverages and groceries, earned the
report's highest "Best Practices" status.
Only two companies — Starbucks and McDonald's — got the nod
for "Better Practices." And eight companies — Arby's, Quiznos, Burger
King, Wendy's, Jack in the Box, Dairy Queen, Domino's Pizza and Papa John's
Pizza — got the "Poor" designation for showing little to no
leadership on packaging sustainability, based on information they make public.
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