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So you bought a coffee in a
disposable cup (it happens) and you want to recycle it. What do you do?
Who the hell knows. The fact that the plastic lid has a recycling symbol
on it doesn't necessarly mean you can, in fact, recycle it. It depends on
what kind of plastic it is, indicated by that tiny, mysterious number
printed inside the recycling logo, and where you live. Some kinds of
plastic are recyled almost everywhere; some, like Styrofoam, are rarely
ever recycled. Plastics without a number, like utensils, can't be
recycled at all. It's confusing.
To address that problem, the
Sustainable Packaging Coalition, a project of the nonprofit group
GreenBlue, is working to redesign recycling labels. The group's
current proposal features four labels: "widely recycled,"
"limited recycling," "not recycled," and "store
drop-off." Unlike the current system, this gives consumers clear,
general guidelines, in
words. For materials that can only be recycled in certain
places, the "limited recycling" label can carry an additional
note that might, for example, advice consumers to "check
locally."
This isn't just some design exercise.
The Sustainable Packaging Coalition has around 200 member businesses,
including everyone from Burt's Bees to Nike to Proctor & Gamble. Once
the label designs are finalized, ten of these member businesses (no word
on which ones yet) are going to participate in a nine-month, nationwide
pilot project. You should start seeing the new labels on shelves in early
October. The eventual goal is to make them the new standard.
See the SPC's draft recycling label designs

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