Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Coke keeps plastic despite calls

- LATESHIA BEACHUM

Coca-Cola is shaking off environmen­talists’ calls to change its packaging, saying there is too much demand for the plastic bottles.

The soft-drink giant’s head of sustainabi­lity, Bea Perez, told the BBC that consumers are fans of plastic-packaged drinks because they’re able to reseal their carbonated beverages in lightweigh­t packaging.

Doing away with plastic altogether for glass or aluminum would increase the business’s carbon footprint and weaken sales, she told the news outlet.

“So as we change our bottling infrastruc­ture, move into recycling and innovate, we also have to show the consumer what the opportunit­ies are. They will change with us,” she said.

The company recognizes that packaging waste is a growing problem and that it has a responsibi­lity to help solve the problem, according to a statement from CocaCola.

“All packaging has a potential environmen­tal impact, so it’s not as simple as saying one format is better than another,” according to a company representa­tive.

Those statements don’t quite make sense to environmen­tal activists who want the company to do more than committing to making its packaging 100% recyclable by 2025 and to make bottles with an average of 50% recycled material by 2030.

The Coca-Cola Co. products accounted for the highest amount of plastic found along coasts, shorelines and parks, according to a 2018 study by global-activist volunteer organizati­on Break Free from Plastic. PepsiCo, home of Coke’s rival, was right behind it, followed by Nestle.

Coca-Cola is holding its crown as the highest plastic-producing company, Break Free From Plastic’s corporate campaign coordinato­r, Emma Priestland, told The Washington Post.

Companies such as CocaCola should be figuring out a way to fix the single-use plastic item economy they created, she said, because that move would benefit their bottom line.

“We see big companies like Coke, PepsiCo, Nestle and Unilever talk about wanting to end plastic pollution, but the [solutions] they put forward rely on individual behavior change, and they rely on recycling,” she said.

Americans recycled and composted about 35.2% of waste in 2017, according to the latest figures from the United States Environmen­tal Protection Agency. More than half of waste ended up in a landfill.

“We just can’t recycle the amount of plastic being produced,” Priestland said. “We don’t have the infrastruc­ture to deal with quantity.”

Plastic can be recycled a limited number of times before it loses its quality, National Geographic reported, but glass and metal don’t lessen in value.

Recycling only delays the inevitable fate of plastic, Priestland said.

Coca-Cola’s claim that its customers can’t part with plastic bottles shows how out of touch the company is with environmen­tal issues, according to a statement by Greenpeace USA plastics campaigner Kate Melges.

“The solution is for CocaCola and other consumer goods giants to fundamenta­lly rethink how they’re bringing products to people, centering systems of reuse and package-free options,” she said. “As long as companies like Coke keep pushing the myth that their bottles are being turned into new bottles over and over again, we are never going to solve the plastic pollution crisis.”

Coca-Cola has introduced refillable water bottles and package-less solutions through its Dasani PureFill and Freestyle machines that dispense a variety of flavored water or Coke options.

“Breaking away from plastic is the only way that we are going to solve this problem,” Priestland said.

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