Vancouver Sun

Couple saving the planet one paper straw at a time

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It was the sight of bottle caps and straws strewn across the beach, and evidence from around the world of sea animals dying from ingesting single-use plastic products, that spurred Leslie Beckmann and Dave Giesbrecht to help turn things around.

The steps the North Vancouver couple chose to take were to import, as Beckmann called it, “a Rube Goldberg machine” — a complicate­d and seemingly over-engineered contraptio­n that performs a simple task — from China, plunk it down in a warehouse in Burnaby, and start the first paper straw manufactur­ing business in B.C.

Beckmann and Giesbrecht’s move to start production earlier this year came amid continuing policy steps by local government­s like the City of Vancouver to cut our reliance on straws and many other single-use plastics.

“A lot of people are now saying, ‘Well, why straws? There are so many other problems that are so much bigger. This is just a pretty, sexy kind of thing to do, but it doesn’t really matter,’” she said. “Our view was that something was better than nothing.”

Beckmann and Giesbrecht’s company, Waterhorse Paper Straws, is doing plenty. Much more than nothing.

The company already produces more than 25,000 environmen­tally friendly paper straws a day.

At full steam, the company could effectivel­y eliminate as many as 5.4 million pieces of plastic per year from the region’s waste stream, and they now have a second machine en route that will be able to produce three times that.

The machine’s manufactur­ing process is complicate­d, with rollers, reels, glue baths, twisters and cutters all working away to turn big spools of paper into small tubes.

The straws can be purchased online, directly from the company, in small batches.

The prices vary depending on the product, but 210 six-millimetre straws sell for $13.

For Beckmann, the paper straws that come out of the machine are superior to “compostabl­e” plastic straws. Unlike plastic items, paper straws can be tossed into green bins.

Compostabl­e plastics require dedicated processes and facilities to biodegrade.

Vancouver is in the midst of working out the details of a bylaw covering an expected ban on all unnecessar­y plastic straws by April 2020.

That bylaw is slated to go before council in late November.

The proposed bylaw “would require food vendors to provide a bendable plastic straw upon request when needed for accessibil­ity,” according to the city.

Vancouver is also approachin­g a Jan. 1, 2020, ban on foam cups and takeout containers.

There are some exemptions to the ban, but businesses will be prohibited from using those products, including existing stock, by that date.

Small pieces of foam made up nine per cent of the trash collected during shoreline cleanups in Vancouver in 2016, according to the city.

By comparison, plastic straws and stir sticks made up about three per cent of shoreline litter.

Plastic bags comprise another three per cent.

A whopping 22 per cent of trash on Vancouver streets is comprised of disposable cups, lids and sleeves, and about half of the garbage collected from public waste bins is takeout containers and cups, the city says.

Beckmann said it’s not easy for consumers to consistent­ly choose environmen­tally friendly options, given the prevalent use of plastics in shops. “I think we’ve got a long way to go,” she said.

But, in her opinion, people were starting to pay attention to wastes they create and the life cycles of products.

It turns out her own company recently found a way to reuse some of the waste it generates, when a beekeeper called to say cast-off straws could be used to build bee houses.

 ?? NICK PROCAYLO ?? Leslie Beckmann and Dave Giesbrecht are producing more than 25,000 paper straws a day.
NICK PROCAYLO Leslie Beckmann and Dave Giesbrecht are producing more than 25,000 paper straws a day.
 ?? NICK PROCAYLO ?? You can buy 210 paper straws from Leslie Beckmann and Dave Giesbrecht for $13.
NICK PROCAYLO You can buy 210 paper straws from Leslie Beckmann and Dave Giesbrecht for $13.

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