Thoughts? I am currently trying to avoid using plastic packed drinks as much as possible due to it’s limited and finite recycle count

7 points

If you’re talking about the US, then you have to spell it the way we spell it.

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7 points

Lol true, Aluminum

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6 points

Do you mean in things like plastic water bottles or other beverage containers like plastic bottles containing soda?

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2 points

Yeah. Beverage bottles

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4 points

Well when it comes to water I feel like it has a lot to do with corporate events and advertising. If you are in Florida for example and the water tastes like it’s been filtered with dead fish you might be more inclined to grab a bottle.

As for soda I think it has a lot to do with the cost of using glass bottles. People don’t really get them refilled. They just recycle them.

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1 point

But that’s how it ia supposed to work, you drop them off at the place where you buy new stuff. They get them refilled and restocked.

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82 points

FYI; cans are plastic lined.

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13 points

TIL. Do you know when that started?

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56 points

Always. We used steel before then because it wouldn’t react with the drink. We always knew aluminum cans would be cheaper, but couldn’t figure out how to protect the flavor and carbonation until Coors figured out how to line it with plastic. He shared the process for free with his competition because he knew a recycling program would scale really well.

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13 points

That’s not entirely true. In the early days they used wax to line the cans because steel still leaves a taste in the drink. It just didn’t work very well and also caused carbonation issues as the CO2 diffused into the wax.

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13 points
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It’s true, but the amount of plastic in the cans is pretty negligible, especially compared to plastic bottles and the aluminum can is still by far the most recyclable beverage container.

Also there are new linings that don’t use plastic but natural materials called oleoresinous linings but they’re not good for acidic things so they’re not very wildly used.

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1 point

he aluminum can is still by far the most recyclable beverage container.

Wouldn’t glass be more recyclable?

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-13 points
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foul: -5 points, extra letter/syllable

in the US, it’s spelled ‘aluminum’

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5 points

That’s enough from you, gregorium.

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0 points

Aloomineeum

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4 points

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7 points

We have a water company here that sells water in cans called Liquid Death, I don’t know if they are international or not.

We also have beer companies that use aluminum bottles over cans, might just be Bud Light and Coors but I dont drink cheap pilsners.

We don’t recycle enough and don’t have the capacity for processing if we did recycle enough. There is no real financial incentive for companies to spend more on aluminum bottles vs cans or plastic. Aluminum bottles have a plastic liner because drinking out of raw aluminum tastes bad and might contribute to Alzheimer’s(might not be true).

I want us to go back to glass bottles but we stopped using them so much because we are terrible people and leave broken glass everywhere and plastic is better for shareholders. Seriously, we we were using glass the amount of broken glass shards in parks, streets, sidewalks, parking lots was a problem when I was a kid.

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2 points
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We don’t recycle enough

Maybe if recycling wasn’t a massive joke it might be useful and people might embrace it.

The reality is no matter how much effort you put into recycling it’s going to a landfill or incinerator.

“Recycling” outside of glass bottles is essentially non existent.

The answer is to stop producing plastic.

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2 points

I was under the impression that only plastic Recycling was a sham and Recycling glass, cans and cardboard was good.

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2 points

Ya but it isn’t the cans, glass bottles, and cardboard that’s causing permanent environmental damage. It’s plastic that we are manufacturing daily all for it to wind up in a landfill and the side of the road which finds its way into rivers, lakes , oceans and pretty much everywhere else.

The lack of recycling glass isn’t what’s killing us. It’s plastic.

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1 point

The majority of the aluminum in circulation in the US is recycled. It’s significantly more than even glass and paper. The reason is because it’s much cheaper to use recycled aluminum than raw.

But you’re right when it comes to plastic.

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