USA TODAY US Edition

Starbucks wants to make eco-friendly cup

Stakes are high as coffee giant issues $10M challenge

- Zlati Meyer

In an age of drones, robots and virtual reality, Starbucks is sponsoring a challenge aimed at revolution­izing a decidedly low-tech product — the paper coffee cup.

The coffee giant is hoping scientists, chemists or just everyday tinkerers and thinkers can come up with a cup that’s compostabl­e, breaking down in a way that it basically disappears from the waste stream, or becomes a component in another product.

The problem isn’t just the paper, but the cup’s waterproof lining.

Inventing a truly eco-friendly coffee cup is no small feat, and the stakes are huge. Consumers go through an estimated 600 billion paper and plastic cups per year worldwide. Starbucks says its coffee drinkers and other customers account for about 1%, or around 6 billion.

The $10 million NextGen Cup Challenge initiative was announced Tuesday in conjunctio­n with Closed Loop Partners’ Center for the Circular Economy, which promotes sustainabl­e consumer goods and recycling. Inventors working on an answer to the disposable cup conundrum will receive grants.

“This is the first step in the developmen­t of a global end-to-end solution that would allow cups around the world to be diverted from landfills and composted or given a second life as another cup, napkin or even a chair — anything that can use recycled material,” Starbucks said.

Starbucks says its paper cups currently are made with 10% post-consumer recycled fiber.

To prod consumers to use reusable cups, the company’s stores in London last month began levying a fee of 5 pence — roughly 7 cents — for paper cups, a trial that will last three months to see if the charge changes consumer behavior.

The British government is considerin­g mandating a 25-pence charge per disposable cup.

In 2017, the Seattle-based chain began serving its Nitro Cold Brew Coffee with sippable lids, so no plastic straws are needed

Starbucks’ eco-cup announceme­nt came the same day McDonald’s shared its plans to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions. The burger chain has said it is working to make all of its customer packaging come from renewable, recycled or certified sources, up from 50% now, and have all restaurant­s recycling by 2025.

Packaging that can be recycled has an estimated market value of $11.4 billion that is wasted each year, according to the Natural Resources Defense Council.

“Reusable cups clearly are the best solution,” said Erik Olson, the organizati­on’s senior director for food and health. “We are concerned that a lot of fast-food containers are not recyclable ... Any movement in reducing the amount of waste that goes to landfills and moving to recyclable or at least compostabl­e containers is a good thing.”

Other food companies are going in the same direction.

Last month, Dunkin’ Donuts announced it would rid polystyren­e foam cups from all of its locations around the world by 2020 — a move the chain said would translate into 1 billion fewer such cups in landfills.

In January, Evian promised to make all of its plastic bottles from 100% recycled plastic by 2025. Coca Cola has pledged to make bottles with an average of 50% recycled content by 2030. And in 2016, Pepsico promised to make all of the packaging recoverabl­e or recyclable by 2025.

 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON/AP ?? Consumers go through an estimated 600 billion paper and plastic cups per year worldwide; Starbucks says its coffee drinkers and other customers account for about 1% of that, or about 6 billion.
ELAINE THOMPSON/AP Consumers go through an estimated 600 billion paper and plastic cups per year worldwide; Starbucks says its coffee drinkers and other customers account for about 1% of that, or about 6 billion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States