Unfortunately these types of dedicated shops tend to be expensive - at least this has been the case for the soap dispensaries I've been to. Until they're more widely adopted, I guess that problem won't go away. It's an unfortunate paradox! I'd love for governments (or benevolent rich folks) to subsidise businesses like these so they can appeal to a broader audience.
RideAgainstTheLizard
100%
At a minimum, if a company wants to use a certain type of packaging for their products, they need to prove that they have the means to fully reuse it as part of their own mini circular economy. If their packaging is found at the beach, it can be placed into a bin, sorted and sent right back to them, and they're happy to receive it.
A friend of mine works in pharma research and said the amount of plastic waste is staggering. The general belief is that materials need to be sterile and this is the only way, however it sounds like they're beginning to question this narrative.
It sounds like a potentially lucrative problem to solve!
For sure! However these are conscious choices that informed consumers can make. What I'd love to see is a world where an uninformed consumer can choose default products that have no impact on the environment because the government has made it so. No additional effort is required on the part of the consumer.
Want foodstuffs? Those are purchasable by weight and if you need a container they're cardboard or glass. Want soap? The store stocks bars of it or liquid by weight.
The irony of using an AI generated image for this post...
AI imagery makes any article look cheaper in my view, I am more inclined to "judge the book by its cover".
Why would you slap something so lazy on top of a piece of writing you (assuming it isn't also written by AI) put time and effort into?
I remember cartoons used to have a common trope character who would build gadgets out of old junk in their shed. Now that we're living in a world with plenty of e-waste, it feels this trope never materialised. Where are all the modded smartphones or homemade robots? Is the cost of modding/fixing something simply higher than the cost of buying a new product?