I know they’re supposed to be good for the environment. But… Holy smokes they drive me up the wall. They really do!

I had no trouble adapting when aluminum can pull-tabs got replaced by push-tabs, because it was pretty much the same movement, and I could see the immediate advantage of not getting cut by a pull-tab.

But the tethered cap is fighting decades of muscle memory in me: I’m used to taking the cap off with one hand and keeping it there while taking a swig with the other. Now I unscrew the cap with one hand, but I still have to hold the cap so it’s out of the way. It feels like drinking in handcuffs each and every time…

So unlike the pull-tab, the tethered plastic bottle cap is one of those compulsory eco solutions that constantly make you feel ever-so-slightly more miserable all the time, and I hate that because ecology only works when it brings something of value both to people and to the environment.

  • HikingVet@lemmy.ca
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    8 months ago

    Well, glass bottles can be washed and reused. The beer industry does this as standard practice.

    Glass and aluminum are easier to recycle. Actually recycling these two materials are an order of magnitude easier and cheaper than new material.

    Plastic can be recycled, but has a faster degradation rate and the infrastructure isn’t present on the scale of glass and aluminum.

    • quicksand
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      8 months ago

      Interesting. How do the beer companies get their bottles back to reuse?

      • HikingVet@lemmy.ca
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        8 months ago

        In my area, it through the recycling. Beer bottles have always been worth $0.05, so its worth it to return them to a depot. They also get sorted out if you leave them on the curb or takenby someone who wants the bottle deposit.

        • quicksand
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          8 months ago

          Returning them through the deposit makes sense, but I never would think that the recycling pickup people would sort them. Ours just take it to the dump

          • bjorney@lemmy.ca
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            8 months ago

            the recycling pickup people

            It’s not, it’s usually retirees or homeless people doing it for cash

            • quicksand
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              8 months ago

              So how do they return the bottles to the distributors?

              • Nouveau_Burnswick@lemmy.world
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                8 months ago

                It’s just a reverse change of distribution. The bottles go back to a central location (some regions that’s a bottle depot, other the point of sale then bottle depot). The bottle depot sorts and returns.