Blue Bottle

COFFEE CHAIN BLUE BOTTLE AIMS TO ELIMINATE PAPER AND PLASTIC CUPS

Coffee chain Blue Bottle has become the latest large company looking to reduce plastic waste by testing a program aimed at eliminating paper and plastic cups at all of its locations across the country.

Blue Bottle CEO Bryan Meehan said in a statement that by the end of 2020, all 70 of its U.S. cafes will be zero waste, which means at least 90% of their waste is diverted from landfill.

To achieve that goal, the company is testing a zero-single-use-cup program at its locations in the San Francisco Bay Area, encouraging customers to bring their own mugs for coffee or pay “a modest deposit” for a reusable cup provided by Blue Bottle.

Meehan admitted it’s an experiment that “may not work, that may cost them money, and that may make your life a little more complicated.”

The company, which is based in Oakland, California, goes through an average of 15,000 disposable, single-use cups at each of its U.S. locations every month, which is 12 million cups a year, according to Meehan.

“We’re not afraid to admit that we’re part of the problem,” he said.

Meehan also noted that he hopes the change will inspire Blue Bottle’s parent company, Nestlé, to do more. Nestle has set a longer timeline for environmental change, pledging to making all its packaging reusable or recyclable by 2025 and become carbon-neutral by 2050.

He admitted that the new policy may rankle some customers.

“A commitment to reuse will wreak havoc on every aspect of our pilot cafe’s operations,” he said. “We expect to lose some business. We might fail. We know some of our guests won’t like it — and we’re prepared for that. But the time has come to step up and do difficult things. It’s our responsibility to the next generation to change our behavior”- he added. Blue Bottle joins companies like Starbucks, McDonald’s, Kroger, IKEA and Dunkin’ that have announced they are greatly reducing or eliminating plastic and styrofoam straws, cups and bags from their locations.

This article first appeared in www.today.com

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