That's because they are the only people that own 50% + of the market.
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The two tobacco companies Altria and Philip Morris International combined made up 2% of the branded plastic litter found, both Danone and Nestlé each produced 3% of it, PepsiCo was responsible for 5% of the discarded packaging, and 11% of branded plastic waste could be traced to the Coca-Cola company.
I would have thought Nestle would be far higher considering how many other brands it owns and how widespread its products are.
that's how economies of scale work. unless the majority of the population (globally) boycotts all of those companies and their subsidiaries, which isnt going to happen, nothing will change.
someone else just needs to start a business model around cleaning up plastic pollution - it's certainly never going to go away on its own.
Great, can we please finally jail those in charge? Can we then sue those companies for all they're worth so that we can use that money to clean up said plastic?
That's sort of like saying one species is responsible for the overwhelming amount of pollution. It makes it seem like there's an easily identifiable culprit, but you're talking about 60 firms involved in like... everything you use and interact with every day.
It's pretty clear that as these and the rest of the companies decide what products and services are available, their marketing ploy to shift responsibility to consumer choice doesn't hold water
It's also saying that in theory of we can make these few companies to change their way we can make a very big difference, and also saying that in practice these behemoths wil fight any change tooth and nail and use their oversized political influence to do so.
About 10-12 years back i went to Dominican (outside of resort's). It was eye opening in a sense, though what shocked me then was the amount of empty 2L bottle everywhere, it was insane.
The largest number of discarded coke bottles I've ever seen in my life was on a camel trip through the Sahara 🥺
Really?
No, most of the time you couldn't see the coke bottles for the discarded shopping bags 😥
Morocco is a beautiful country, but the inhabitants treat it like a giant fuckin dustbin. It's absolutely disgusting
*branded plastic pollution
Most plastic pollution is not branded.
When traveling I've found that I can buy and refill aluminum water bottles.
Like this: https://www.mananalu.com/
More than once now I've found water in an aluminium bottle at a grocery store while traveling. Buy one and refill. Works great and less to pack.
Think the unthinkable- what if we not only still sold most of our beverages in recyclable glass bottles, what if we also offered money to recycle them?
Don't forget aluminum!
Aluminum is theoretically recyclable an unlimited number of times, so the cans are much less of an issue.
My point is aluminum and glass are much better than plastic.
I think one or the draw backs with aluminium cans though is they still have that plastic lining inside?
Coke cans and most pop for example still have plastic inside. Canada even recently made a paper wine bottle, but believe it or not, plastic bag inside a paper bottle.
Hey, make sure you guys don't use plastic straws anymore, and turn the water off when you're lathering up in the shower. 🙄
Remember its your straw that killed all the turtles tho.
Hallelujah
The top five brands globally were The Coca-Cola Company (11%), PepsiCo (5%), Nestlé (3%), Danone (3%), and Altria (2%), accounting for 24% of the total branded count
I would’ve expected a slightly different order, but those companies also control about 24% of the food we buy, so… not surprising.
They mostly don't make their own plastic containers. You have to make a shitton of plastic bottles and caps to make money and there are companies that only make empty plastic bottles and companies that only make plastic caps. Look at the bottom of your plastic bottles and caps for Logos of the companies that produced them.
I didn't know why I'm being downvoted, I worked at a plastic bottle factory making millions of bottles per day for many different big companies, including some listed there. They make the bottles and ship them empty to the companies to be filled.
Did you read the article? It’s not about who made the plastic containers at all, it’s about which company made the product that they contain.
When they hire a private company to make their packaging, then there are no public records on how much plastic they actually buy. (It's in the millions of tons per year range) It also doesn't account for the amount of energy used to produce packaging (it's a a fuckton)
Really? That's exactly the order I would have expected.
I would have thought Nestle to be higher. They are massive pieces of shit that poison children, after all. I figured they'd be putting plastic in the ocean on purpose like a Captain Planet antagonist.
I expected McDonald's to be up there.
Maccies has had paper cups, fry holders and wrappers for at least two decades, and now everything used within the, er, "restaurant" is reusable
Is it different where you are?
Definitely plastic cups but paper straws for some reason
They still use plastic straws in some places, and paper cups contain plastic, but yeah they don't seem to produce so much of (plastic) waste
PepsiCo is bigger than Coke, for one
PepsiCo owns Lays, which makes dry food. Coca-Cola mostly stays with beverages these days.
Sure, but some of that food is in plastic containers. Pepsi owns a shit ton of brands. By revenue, they are twice as big as Coke
Then it makes them four times more ecological in a way, if that's even applicable to a company producing that much pollution
I'd say the facts speak for themselves.
🔥
I always bring my refillable Nalgenes, Stanleys, Yetis, Corksicles, and Hydro Flasks to the Coke headquarters to fill up my family's monthly allotment of soda. Take that, Big Plastic!