“The creative solution we bring forward has the
potential to influence how we do sustainable packaging with zero waste and no
impact on wildlife”
Marco Vega,
co-founder of We Believers commenting on Saltwater Brewery's biodegradable
plastic rings
Another company finally joins the anti-plastic
bandwagon.
Saltwater Brewery has developed an environmentally
friendly replacement for those plastic rings used to hold six-pack cans of beer
as reported in the article “Saltwater
Brewery’s new six-pack rings are compostible, biodegradable, and totally edible”,
published May 18, 2016 By Chloe Olewitz, DigitalTrends.
The replacement rings are the result of partnership with
an ad agency called We Believers and is made of wheat and barley. Not only
biodegradable, but they are edible to marine life and even humans as noted in
the article “These
biodegradable six-pack rings double as fish food”, published May 19, 2016
By Lizzie Plaugic, The Verge.
The video below explains it all.
The idea is that it would prevent birds and marine
life from choking to death on plastic rings from beer cans.
This is very similar to Wisynco Jamaica's plans to
stop using Styrofoam and instead make biodegradable plastic containers instead
as noted in my blog
article entitled “Why
Wisynco making coloured Biodegradable Styrofoam heralds Beeswax Cardboard
Packaging”.
Hopefully, local breweries in Jamaica like Red Stripe
Will begin to do likewise and support this tasty alternative form of packaging.
Especially as they are now using Cassava to replace wheat and hops as noted in
my blog article entitled
“Red Stripe's US$800,000 Cassava
Processing Plant - How Hops from Wheat and Barley is replaced by Cassava Starch”.
It might make your Red Stripe Beer more expensive, but
at least the packaging would be edible!
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