Beverage Spectrum Logo
Subscribe Now
March 2008 > Feature
Email To A Friend  Email  |  Printable Version  Print

Bottle Bills

By Matt Casey



The cooler case may feel warmer now than it has in recent years, but don’t blame a faulty thermostat. Blame the fire stoked by environmentalists and beverage industry lobbyists in their fight over bottle deposits.

Battles over disposable packaging are nothing new to the beverage industry, to be sure, but in recent years two things have changed to bring them back onto the public agenda. First, there’s the sheer size of the beverage industry – it has added billions of bottles of water alone into the waste stream in the past decade. The second is a public that hasn’t been this environmentally hyper since the publication of “Silent Spring.”

As a result, modern consumers are on the warpath when it comes to pushing companies to minimize the negative effects their products have on the environment. The public’s interest in bottle bills is spawned by the same “inconvenient truths” as their interest in carbon neutrality and recycling: the fear that society’s waste could, at some point, via global warming or some other environmental disaster, render the world uninhabitable.

To their credit, beverage companies have responded to their Al Gore-educated consumers by publicly exhibiting their own, individual green credentials. Coke and PepsiCo have made commitments to recycling and carbon footprint reduction. Anheuser-Busch is playing up its own environmental bona fides. But as a unified industry, leaders continue to fight bottle deposit initiatives.

“Singling out beverage containers just doesn’t address the problem,” said Tracey Halliday, director of communications for the American Beverage Association.

Still, the industry is starting to have some defections, as environmentally minded (or simply profit-seeking) beverage companies – particularly in the bottled water crowd, which owes much of its success to a marketing approach that stresses its purity and natural aura – are starting to break ranks. Fiji Water, to name one large example, recently stirred the pot by looking to endorse bottle bills and announcing its intent to go carbon negative.

Currently, 11 states use bottle deposits to encourage their residents to recycle beverage containers. Most of those states passed their laws in the 1970s and 1980s before last century’s first environmental movement ran out of steam. But the proposals have returned in recent years: legislators in seven non-deposit states and the U.S. senate are considering what a nickel could be worth to the environment, and legislators in four states with deposits want to expand their programs.

Environmentalists are sounding a call to action in each of those battlegrounds, emboldened by recent victories in Hawaii and the Pacific Northwest. The Aloha state instituted a deposit system in 2005, and Oregon is scheduled to expand its older version in 2009. With that momentum and the current value consumers place on environmentally friendly practices – a recent survey by A.C. Nielsen revealed that more than half of the consumers polled would give up convenience for environmentally beneficial packaging – why shouldn’t retailers and beverage companies embrace bottle bills?

Ask that question and the flamethrowers come out. According to Halliday, deposits levy a discriminatory tax on an industry that produces only 4 percent of waste streaming into municipal landfills.

“(Bottle deposits) only look at one element of the waste stream,” Halliday said. “They’re not addressing the overall problem.”

Email To A Friend  Email  |  Printable Version  Print
2 3 Next >>
There are currently 0 comments on this article
Leave a Comment
 Name (required)  
 Email (required but will not be published)  
Please note: All comments are reviewed prior to posting. Attempts to advertise, solicit, or promote will not be approved.
 





BevNet Beverage Spectrum Logo