Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't like plastic either but glass is very difficult to recycle. The best bet is to buy recycled plastic and re-use the glass at home.
I hate buying things in small glass because I know even if I rinse and recycle it’s not going to be, and it’s so much glass and caps compared to the product. Would love just big bins of things like the old general store. If only stuff didn’t go bad or get contaminated.
But very few consumers caring will not convince profit motivated companies with uncaring consumers
Anonymous wrote:Glass also doesn't tend to add any taste, where I find that sometimes there can be a plastic taste, especially if it has gotten hot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Heavy glass is worse for climate change.
Not necessarily.
Plus it breaks down.
Better to not buy many beverages at all. Make your own tea or herbal tisane and then transport it in reusable bottles of you need it in the go. Far more efficient to ship loose leaf tea than all the water weight in a liquid beverage.
Anonymous wrote:Heavy glass is worse for climate change.
Anonymous wrote:Glass also doesn't tend to add any taste, where I find that sometimes there can be a plastic taste, especially if it has gotten hot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
PPs are missing the larger point: that plastics pollute by degrading into microplastics that perturb hormonal and endocrine functioning, and by ending up in the ocean, killing wildlife.
Glass is inert. It becomes sand over time.
This. No one should be drinking water out of plastic. The endocrinological changes are serious. They are linking it to all kinds of cancers and decreased fertility.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Glass costs more to transport.
Which do you care about more - carbon or plastic? Because that's the trade off.
Anonymous wrote:
PPs are missing the larger point: that plastics pollute by degrading into microplastics that perturb hormonal and endocrine functioning, and by ending up in the ocean, killing wildlife.
Glass is inert. It becomes sand over time.
Anonymous wrote:
PPs are missing the larger point: that plastics pollute by degrading into microplastics that perturb hormonal and endocrine functioning, and by ending up in the ocean, killing wildlife.
Glass is inert. It becomes sand over time.