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Sunday, April 28, 2024

Coca-Cola unveils waste-free approach

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The Coca-Cola Company said it is fundamentally reshaping its approach to packaging, with a global goal to help collect and recycle the equivalent of 100 percent of its packaging by 2030.

This goal is the centerpiece of the company’s new packaging vision for a World Without Waste, which the Coca-Cola system intends to back with a multi-year investment that includes ongoing work to make packaging 100-percent recyclable. 

This begins with the understanding that food and beverage containers are an important part of people’s modern lives but that there is much more to be done to reduce packaging waste globally.

“The world has a packaging problem – and, like all companies, we have a responsibility to help solve it,” said James Quincey, president and chief executive of The Coca-Cola Company. “Through our World Without Waste vision, we are investing in our planet and our packaging to help make this problem a thing of the past.”

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“By 2030, for every bottle or can the Coca-Cola system sells globally, we aim to help take one back so it has more than one life. The company is investing its marketing dollars and skills behind this 100-percent collection goal to help people understand what, how and where to recycle,” the company said. 

“We will support collection of packaging across the industry, including bottles and cans from other companies. The Coca-Cola system will work with local communities, industry partners, our customers, and consumers to help address issues like packaging litter and marine debris,” it said.

The company said it is continuing to work toward making all of its packaging 100-percent recyclable globally. It said it is building better bottles, whether through more recycled content, by developing plant-based resins, or by reducing the amount of plastic in each container. 

World Without Waste is the next step in the Company’s ongoing sustainability efforts, building off success in replenishing an estimated 100 percent of the water it uses in its final beverages. 

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