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Keurig Spends 10 Years Developing A Recyclable Coffee Cup (boston.com)

Last year Keurig Green Mountain sold over 9 billion single servings of its coffee in plastic "K-Cups" -- none of which could be recycled. "Placed end to end, the pods sold in a year would circle the globe roughly 10 times," reports the New York Times News Service, noting the company spent the last 10 years developing a backwards-compatible cup that could actually be recycled. In the mid-1990s, "Keurig began buying the containers -- made from a blend of plastic that is tough to recycle -- in bulk, never expecting that it would one day sell billions a year. But because Keurig machines were designed specifically for the pods, changing course soon seemed virtually impossible." One environmental advocate complained "There are a lot of ways to make coffee that don't use so much packaging. Making coffee wasn't something that needed to be reinvented." But the company may still face criticism because their new cups can be recycled -- but not composted.

10 of 299 comments (clear)

  1. Hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Funny, because every time I get coffee from one of those little cups it taste like it's already been composted.

    1. Re: Hmm by Type44Q · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Apparently there are millions of people who disagree with you.

      There are millions who'd disagree with my refusal to ever consume McDonalds... do I really need to continue?!

    2. Re:Hmm by cellocgw · · Score: 4, Funny

      They produce a brown liquid that is a vague approximation of coffee.

      I believe the official slashdotically approved phrasing is "..a brown liquid that tasted almost, but not entirely, nothing like coffee."
      (apologies to the obvious paraphrasee)

      --
      https://app.box.com/WitthoftResume Code: https://github.com/cellocgw
  2. Re:Bite the bullet by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Design a new machine. People will eventually switch over, especially the vocal save-the-planet types.

    They don't sell current machines, what good would a new one do?

    Oh, excuse me, the 2.0 crap? Yea, not gonna buy a DRM coffee machine.

    So this doesn't really help, since I'm not switching from the original.

  3. You don't have to use keurig brand cups by fragMasterFlash · · Score: 4, Insightful

    These k-cup compatible pods are ~90% biodegradable. Keurig should license their design post haste.

    1. Re:You don't have to use keurig brand cups by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 4, Interesting

      These k-cup compatible pods are ~90% biodegradable. Keurig should license their design post haste.

      Those are the ones we buy, actually. On Amazon they're relatively inexpensive ("relative" to other K-cups... not the good ol' coffee pot).

      I was against getting a Keurig, but my wife really wanted one - so I eventually relented. I really hate the thing. It probably makes more sense for people who don't drink much coffee; but, if you were a pot-a-day family, the cost of replacing that with a Keurig is ludicrous. We're spending easily $50 a month, just on coffee! And it doesn't seem like those things actually save you any effort - it's just that it's spaced out throughout the day. If it made really good coffee, that might sway me... but it's worse than brewing a pot.

      I like to tell people that, if my wife pre-deceases me, even before I call the mortician I'm putting that Keurig in the trash. I hate it that much.

      --
      #DeleteChrome
  4. Or you could use paper cups instead by jsse · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It might surprise some hardcore environmentalists that using paper cups, or just using more paper on anything else, might be more environment friendly than you might imagine. (The following facts might be considered as flamebait again but please read on with patient before you mod.)

    Papers are not made from cutting wood in rain forest anymore (some furniture, on the other hand, still are). 95% of the raw materials in paper are coming from trees, and these trees are carefully planned to grow and harvest. Various "Tree Funds" were raised every 10-15 years for raising money in building such tree farms.

    Unfortunately, these "Tree Funds" are very sensitive to market. When there are less demand in papers, these funds would diminish, and in turn less tree farms would be built. Less tree farms, less trees, less oxygen-producers, more carbon dioxide, more severe the green house effect and so forth.

    Encouraging paper-saving would probably lead to more green house gases. The irony...

  5. Reuseable K-Cup insert by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 4, Informative

    There are inserts that fit the Keurigs that you can fill with your own ground coffee, then empty after it's brewed. I'd love to use them, it'd give me a wider variety of coffees. The only problem is that none of them seal properly, water and grounds come out the top and make a mess and the leakage interferes with the brewing. If Keurig really wanted to solve the problem, put the research into modifying the MyK-Cup so it seals properly and the water flows through the grounds rather than off the top and through the open mesh screen.

  6. The Original Recyclable Coffee Machine by jshackney · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Bialetti Moka Express:

    • reusable
    • makes coffee you can taste
    • makes one cup at a time
    • grounds are easily recycled
  7. assholes by supernova87a · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Let's not be such eager shills for Keurig's attempts to fix up its image, shall we? Their priority isn't doing good for the environment or the customer, it's doing whatever it takes to makes customers think that they're doing good for the environment -- so that they recover their sales revenues after the customer-fucking DRM attempt with Keurig 2.0 that got them tarred and feathered.