Here I was thinking I was the only one that had the same thoughts about the bottle, everyone around doesn't care and just places them in the recycling bin, and Glass is annoying as some just buy the product for the container.
@L834675 жыл бұрын
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@ThumbWar20125 жыл бұрын
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@ReadalotSleepyhead245 жыл бұрын
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@Isaaclichtenstein5 жыл бұрын
Crash Course Environmental Studies pls?
@jonasl.48105 жыл бұрын
This.
@nikkiwilliamson46655 жыл бұрын
Yes! I loved studying environmental studies. It was my favourite subject :)
@isabbygabbyorcrabby5 жыл бұрын
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@stephgreis7055 жыл бұрын
Yes please!!
@NoaNoName5 жыл бұрын
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@josielynn63695 жыл бұрын
I wish manufacturers were responsible for recycling their products. Then there'd be an economic benefit to making a product more recyclable.
@Norwaycat915 жыл бұрын
Yes Crash Course environmental studies!!! Political implications, future stuff that still aren't common but will change the world, different methods of recycling around the world, what we personally can do, what big companies need to do etc. For instance in Norway most of the plastic we find on our beaches do not come from Norway because we recycle pretty well (could always be better!).
@thomasr71295 жыл бұрын
Actually not true. A LOT of the waste is from fish farms, fisheries and maritime use, and also from land-based activities - all from Norway. I've been part of several clean up projects where we sent the collected thrash to be analyzed for the origins. On the west coast, most of the plastic found is "local". If we add in micro plastics and nano plastics, that originates mostly from traffic, and it is much harder to see (and clean up). Yes, we recycle more, but not enough. Far from.
@L834675 жыл бұрын
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@Norwaycat915 жыл бұрын
@@thomasr7129 hey! I realised I didn't get spesific enough, when I wrote the post I was thinking of plastic bottles spesifically! You are definitely right in the fact we aren't doing enough! :)
@thomasr71295 жыл бұрын
@@Norwaycat91 - Plastic bottles are refunded in Norway, and with the new increase in deposit, maybe even more people make sure that they are recycled. Such arrangements - where you have to pay a deposit fee that is refunded when you hand in the old / empty / used product, should be more widespread. There's also work in progress on increasing the number of "refund centers" where they take in the waste and handle it. Many harbors have such facilities for plastic waste and discarded fishing gear.
@crazEgamer2015 жыл бұрын
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@FutureNow5 жыл бұрын
You pointing at an empty Vitamin Water and yelling "THIS SHOULD BE ILLEGAL" is my favorite Hank.
@morganforester53405 жыл бұрын
my favorite part is at 14:00 when he nearly says "THIS IS ILLEGAL". not yet, but soon
@mehrajuddin55515 жыл бұрын
" Compete on the product , not on the bottles" Well said!!! 👍
@Yonatan245 жыл бұрын
When what you're doing is selling basically the same sugar water, you need to advertise the feeling of the product - with a cleverly designed bottle - whose shape is designed specifically to make it look like you;'re getting more than what you paid for...
@thelastcube.5 жыл бұрын
wonder whether they'll listen though
@DineLade5 жыл бұрын
well, it's kinda a two-way street. if consumers would only decide based on the product itself, companies would compete on that instead of packaging or whatever. you always have to take your own actions into account as well, since that is basically what marketers do on a societal level
@onechicken1565 жыл бұрын
HI CRASHING COURSE ON ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES IS A FANTASTIC IDEA!!!
@swizzili11405 жыл бұрын
Jana Choo crash my course papa!
@sarahalewijnse11775 жыл бұрын
Heck yeah! I did it for A-Level but that was a few years ago. I'd love to see an updated version.
@rafaelah14925 жыл бұрын
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@morganherndon44205 жыл бұрын
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@yuuri90645 жыл бұрын
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@isabbygabbyorcrabby5 жыл бұрын
The last sixty seconds of Coca-Cola directed rage are the biggest mood I have seen in forever!
@inademv5 жыл бұрын
I work for them and I feel that shit every single day
@Master_Therion5 жыл бұрын
@@inademv Haha, I work for Coca-Cola too. I'm a QC lab tech. The environmental impact makes me sad.
@qwertyman15115 жыл бұрын
Europe would like to remind you, you can have a system across a continent that reuses glass and plastic. The system is two-fold: *bars get crates of glass bottles and hand back crates of empty bottles. *supermarkets tax people when they buy bottles, be it glass or plastic (like beer bottles). you get your tax back when you deposit them back at a store which sells that brand of product. it is in the form of a discount slip for the next time you buy something at the supermarket chain you deposited them at.
@toobusytocreateaname5 жыл бұрын
QWERTY man +
@menuchacolish4 жыл бұрын
we have that here in ny. it’s not on everything just milk and dairy products. we buy and keep the bottles to reuse as drinking glasses and flower vases. they tax about $2 and give it back once you return it to the farm
@meretriciousinsolent2 жыл бұрын
They used to do this in the UK. The pop man (at least, where I'm from) would drop off fizzy drinks like the willy wonka milk man. Also shops took returns too. They don't do that now. There are glass milk bottles again now though, I wonder what the overall effect of that rinse and return scheme is, whether it's worth going back to that from plastic. Also the bottles are way smaller than the big milk things I get. I also get milk from a farm 3 miles away in those plastic bottles (and icecream) so... that's a big thing too.
@maritrndal8152 жыл бұрын
ugh yes nothing like being a student, hosting a party and hogging the recycling machine for a good hour the next day so you can buy groceries for the week
@qwertyman15112 жыл бұрын
@@maritrndal815 i can't tell if this is sarcastic. i'll assume it is. the machines can take bottles by the crate (for decades now). so if you drink 3 crates in a night, just put 3 empty crates in. done in 30 seconds.
@faylinameir5 жыл бұрын
I'd really love a more in depth video as to why glass
@patamonsvk5 жыл бұрын
@@MariellaAAR way less then melting silicate sand into glass. Lot of recycled glass is used into new glass making as it makes melting sand easier. And also you can do it forever without material loss, plastic at some point is just trash. Recycle is about more then just one time getting it back. Also I love how Hank is ok, with piles of trash, as he leaves in a country were space is abandon. Not every place on earth has enough space that is no nature enough that we can use it to dump infinite trash forever.
@Charlesbn885 жыл бұрын
Glass is much better, if you use it right. Modern culture is not much for reusing stuff, so then glass becomes bad. But saving glass jars to use for storing stuff is the ideal state or returning them. In the Danish return system glass is used a lot, by actually reusing the glass bottle, but then you have to make sure people return the glass bottles to the stores.
@sydneyashelton85975 жыл бұрын
In my two sense this debate shows how complicated environmental issues are, and the correct solution depends on what you care about. Plastic, even if recycled, is often downcycled meaning it will still end up in the landfill after a few reuses. So, if you're concerned with a lack of landfill space or plastic pollution then glass is a better option. The other side of that it carbon footprint of course (which plastics are produced from petroleum so if we want to completely stop taking out fossil fuels we will have to stop using plastic). Given that most manufacturing processes today use fossil fuels, it's clearly a larger carbon footprint to use glass. However, if everything was powered by renewables, then glass would likely be preferable from a carbon footprint standpoint. Of course more energy needed means more metals to be mined to produce solar panels, etc. So basically there is no best option, only better options depending on which aspect you care about. My advice is to do your best to use what you already have and reuse what is inevitable for you to buy.
@merrinatrix5 жыл бұрын
Charles Nielsen Avalon Dairy where I live reuses their milk bottles. You can see a year on the bottle and imagine how many times the bottle has been reused. They charge a $1 deposit to encourage people to return them. I choose to buy it even though it is more expensive. But I feel it hits my “ buy local” and “low waste” buttons. Also their chocolate milk it the best.
@derkarlotto5 жыл бұрын
i study material science of glass and ceramic and yeah, glass does take a lot of energy to recycle, but not nearly as much, as making new glass does. The amorph state of the glass lets it melt at way cooler temperatures, than the kristaline minerals you use to make it in the first place. so please definitly recycle your glass! be sure not to mix regular glass with high temperature resistant glass like oven doors, lab-glass etc or your grandmas old lead glass. i can see that being a huge problem with recycling, but since i dont work in recycling im actually not too sure whether thats a much of a problem at all. that said reusing or not purchasing any pakaging is of course the best solution. in germany you pay a few cents for most glass bottles, and when you return them you get that money back and they get reused over and over.
@jesi-bop5 жыл бұрын
I'm an intern at a packaging design firm. "Your bottles are going to look like other people's bottles. Compete on the product." totally resonated with me. I see these old designers making these needlessly complicated designs and not taking into consideration how wall thicknesses, color, and material affect our planet and our future.
@asireprimad5 жыл бұрын
great video! one detail: this aluminium can is containing a "hidden" plastic bottle inside (the inner layer) so that the alu is not reacting with the content of the can.
@b4itstarted5 жыл бұрын
I do research on using bacteria to degrade plastic and I think about this a lot.
@Ayaya7875 жыл бұрын
HolyGrayle Just out of curiosity, how do you ensure the bacteria doesn’t spread and endanger plastics in use across the world. Are the environmental conditions for these bacteria specific enough that they won’t be able to propagate?
@Detson4045 жыл бұрын
@@Ayaya787 Interesting question. Some materials like wood can decompose, but under the right conditions can be sturdy for hundreds of years.
@Kowzorz5 жыл бұрын
@@Detson404 Imagine a world where plastic rots like wood.
@lyreparadox5 жыл бұрын
@@Ayaya787 Since we have microplastics in every environment, I'm not sure we'd want to keep these bacteria from spreading? If plastic "rotted" like wood does we'd just end up treating it like wood.
@Ayaya7875 жыл бұрын
Loren Z For example, if the bacteria spread to hospital equipment and started disintegrating it.
@JivanPal5 жыл бұрын
(1) Reduce (2) Reuse (3) Recycle It's not just a set of good things to do, it's also an order of operations. Before you decide to recycle/bin something, ask whether you can reuse/repurpose it. Before you acquire something that you could reuse/recycle, ask yourself whether you can avoid acquiring it in the first place.
@AaronKlapheck2 жыл бұрын
Yes! People do forget to do this in the best order.
@jordan-op6pk5 жыл бұрын
hank's going OFF rn For real tho the standard bottle shape makes a whole lot of sense, it would be the same as standardised shipping containers
@CatCaffeine5 жыл бұрын
I feel like a beer company used to make beer bottles to be reused as building bricks which I thought was really awesome. Plus they were rectangular which seems good for shipping.
@jedigecko065 жыл бұрын
Wow! This reminds me of the 'plain packaging' argument over tobacco products!
@CatCaffeine5 жыл бұрын
@@jedigecko06 I think plain packaging for tobacco is more about decreasing brand power over potentially vulnerable consumers over making recycling a more seamless process so we don't destroy this planet as quickly.
@FellowLee5 жыл бұрын
@@CatCaffeine 2 birds. :)
@TheLemonBird5 жыл бұрын
If all transport was run of renewables and all bottles was made of glass (which can be recycled using renewables) there would be no need to impose regulation on bottle shape and size. Improve dont impose
@princessof965 жыл бұрын
This was actually very interesting. Im surprised at how into it i was 😂
@ScotHarkins5 жыл бұрын
Back to when I was a kid and glass bottles with deposits were common, the quart glass bottles had aluminum caps with a built-in tamper ring. When you unscrewed the cap several compressed tabs around the base of the cap were forced open by a lip on the bottle. They were as easy if not easier than the plastic caps. One more reason why returnable glass bottles "back in the day" were better.
@ScotHarkins5 жыл бұрын
An example: images.app.goo.gl/Frg41HGHsfeq2AE89 The caps were screwed onto the bottle, then a machine crimped the bottom of the cap, pressing the aluminum under a glass lip. The base of the cap was several tabs around the circumference, and the tabs were perforated. When you unscrewed the cap the glass lip forced the tabs apart. You could hear the tabs snapping apart from each other. It was a reliable and ingenious little product quality device, letting you know that no one had opened the bottle and let out the fizz...and it left nothing behind on the bottle! Plastic lids could do the same, but would require a more complicated machine to apply. The genius of the plastic caps is that they are installed as they are, as a one-way screw on cap. Quite brilliant on their own, albeit wasteful.
@JJ-cc2eh5 жыл бұрын
In Germany we still have those, including the returnable glass bottles. I'm not sure how much work it is to clean them up, but I'm pretty sure it's less resources than recycling or producing new. So I do not really agree with the "glass is terrible" sentiment
@NocturnalNick5 жыл бұрын
@@JJ-cc2eh Pretty sure it's cheaper and less resource intensive to create new glass than recycle it if you aren't factoring in something like a tax incentive. Since glass is already dirt cheap, all you're really doing when you recycle it is add extra steps to the manufacturing process. I think reusable bottles (I always forget if it's pop-tops or twist-offs, but I assume it's the pop-tops) are the exception, though.
@ScotHarkins5 жыл бұрын
@@JJ-cc2eh The returnable bottles of that time were very sturdy. That could also mean shipping is a matter coz of weight. With the modern automation afoot nowadays I could picture a machine that accepts and washes returning bottles that also fills and caps them on the spot. Think Soda Stream but on a scale, and with a more efficient carbonation source. Just connect water and power and off you go.
@ScotHarkins5 жыл бұрын
Really, the touch-screen self-serve fountains have us almost all the way there. Just add the bottle management function and let it run from there. Humans would have to maintain with syrup, bottle resupply, etc. All very solvable problems.
@skylerwitherspoon5 жыл бұрын
!!! Thank you, this is so important, and I learned a lot. (ps hank yelling "THIS SHOULD BE ILLEGAL" about one of the bottles is my new favorite thing)
@hyperi0n0015 жыл бұрын
i was under the impression that plastic bottles were NOT turned back into other bottles; that they were turned into lower quality plastics such as truck beds, plastic outdoor furniture, or plastic filling
@thraxarioustailchaser1585 жыл бұрын
Hank seems to be making a lot of very unfounded statements. Like glass is somehow worse than plastic. Glass is far more recyclable as long as types are separated.
@rrg4195 жыл бұрын
Thraxarious Tailchaser Glass CAN be recycled but rarely is. As Hank said, it is a very energy intense process to recycle glass, and because glass is so heavy, it is very expensive to transport as well. Many places that accept glass for recycling sell it for other purposes, such as aggregate, rather than melting it down and forming new glass products. Glass gets an A+ if it gets reused, but is a huge hog on resources to recycle.
@katiecaldwell40875 жыл бұрын
@@rrg419 glass is still easier to recycle than it is to make from raw materials. Which Hank points out is why we recycle plastic. Glass imo is a much better material than plastic it's more reusable, if it does get trashed it gets eroded without damaging the environment and it can be recycled. Look at milk cartons. There is no reason not to go for glass bottle milk, you return the bottle they clean it and put more milk in it the only waste is the foil recyclable top, if it gets broken it gets recycled but over its life that glass milk bottle has saved making 50 plastic cartons. Sure you could recycle all the milk cartons but that's inefficient and has a way worse carbon footprint. The tenets of reduce reuse recycle are in order of importance recycle is really the least importantant step but 'buy less crap' doesn't exactly sell to consumers.
@kaylenpeterson17735 жыл бұрын
I think he mentioned downgraded plastic later. It can be made into new bottles, but isn't as easy to do as aluminum. It does get downgraded a lot, into items that can't be easily recycled again, like clothing or carpet.
@kaylenpeterson17735 жыл бұрын
I think HDPE like from milk jugs (#2) is more commonly made into the products your describing. And #5 plastics are made into some of those products, too. I think #1 plastic is recycled into polyester a lot of the time.
@bertvandepoel5 жыл бұрын
Ever seen the system in The Netherlands? They have standard bottles for lots of thing (less now than in the past though), and lots of things come in those. You bring them back to any store, get some cash back, and the bottles get cleaned and refilled. When we were children we were so impressed by that system when on vacation there. In Belgium, glass has been recycled by the government for as long as I remember. An official video can be found on vimeo.com/122509881 by the way. General information on www.fostplus.be/en/sorting-recycling/all-about-recycling/recycling-glass Hope you enjoy that information :)
@Dooban5 жыл бұрын
Better still is beer bottles which are thoroughly washed in the factory and then re-used.
@bertvandepoel5 жыл бұрын
@@Dooban Same goes for some wine brands, like those from certain supermarkets and fair trade stores. Good point!
@Schmidtelpunkt5 жыл бұрын
It is one of the few occasions when looking at the USA is like looking at a developing country where things are still managed like in a distant past.
@bertvandepoel5 жыл бұрын
@@Schmidtelpunkt I have that same feeling when looking at their health care :P
@kts89005 жыл бұрын
Same idea in south america. You can look at a rack of sodas and see 3-4 generations of the same volume glass bottle with identical contents, all scuffed a little more/less.
@ericvilas5 жыл бұрын
I recently came back from a trip. I don't remember where it was (I think it was Greece?) but the water bottles there had the tamper-proof cap seal be broken _horizontally_ instead of vertically. Instead of leaving a ring at the bottom, the ring remained attached to the top and instead cricked open into 3 parts (that is, 3 slits appeared on the side) which could then separate and slide up. Still tamper-proof, but also the entire cap stayed in one piece. It was an amazing design.
@happily_cj5 жыл бұрын
From now on, I will probably always think "Compete on the product, not on the bottle!" each time I choose a soda to buy.
@soupsgord5 жыл бұрын
Claudia Jenrich might be better to stop buying Soda, nutritionally they have zero value and they have a huge carbon footprint. If you learn to drink water or juice your own fruit, you save a ton of money and also help the planet. Or if you super need soda you could use a reusable container and soda dispensers. :)
@happily_cj5 жыл бұрын
@@soupsgord That definitely would be the best option. Reusable bottles/cups etc are awesome! I own some. Where I live we don't have soda dispensers though - I've never seen one outside a restaurant anyway. However, I don't buy soda a lot anyway these days. Little steps :)
@davidboettger5 жыл бұрын
As a German, I was obviously thinking "Pfand!!" the whole time... xD
@loreer1235 жыл бұрын
i was scrolling through the comments to find someone mentioning the german pfand, lol
@Ayyke5 жыл бұрын
In Dutch we call it "statiegeld", which sounds a lot less cool, but does have the similar benefit that people tend to return their (glass) beerbottles and the plastic crates they come in, all for reuse
@baltoen_5 жыл бұрын
As a Dane I was thinking "pant" xD
@Norwaycat915 жыл бұрын
As a Norwegian also thinking "pant" :p
@johnhenrybussey5 жыл бұрын
I am living in Germany to do my masters degree and I recycle more here than I have at any other time in my life!! It is such a strong incentive.
@jaredcahoon37315 жыл бұрын
One thing some places do to get more people to recycle is including a deposit in the purchase. In Alberta where I live any beverage bottle under a litre, you pay a 10 cent deposit for, over a litre 25 cents. You get the deposits back when you recycle the bottles at a depo. In addition to the deposit, we also pay an Eco Fee which offsets the cost of the recycling and deposit program. I can tell you from my experience that every beverage bottle I encounter gets recycled. Bottle litter is picked up by everyone from seniors, children doing fundraisers, to homeless people. I don't know how well the program works by the numbers but from an average Joe's perspective, it seems to work really well.
@MissiveCauseIMissYou5 жыл бұрын
I think the moment i read somewhere that switching all plastic products to metal or glass would actually make things worse for the planet (manufacturing and travel processes, etc) was the moment I fully comprehended there was no simple answer. We can't just buy fancier products or revert to a simpler time, there's no zero waste movement I can join to completely eliminate my impact. We hsve to change the structure of how things are made, moved, and consumed. It simultaneously makes me feel more and less guilty/stressed
@juliacastillo19355 жыл бұрын
that's why we have to re-use and stop relying on products that come from faraway places whenever possible
@yuuri90645 жыл бұрын
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@untappedinkwell5 жыл бұрын
I didn't know I needed that rant about bottles and the cocacola company today, but that was... deeply cathartic. I'm here for it. Thanks Hank!
@ohheycrystalhey5 жыл бұрын
1. FYI for anyone in the comments, at least in DC, you're supposed to leave the plastic bottle caps on the bottle when recycling them! Caps by themselves are too small and get lost in the machinery. Always check your local govt website to see what you can and cannot recycle, and how to responsibly dispose of items. 2. Hank, you said "glass is so impossible/so hard to recycle". From what I understand, glass is 100% recyclable and doesn't degrade in quality (unlike plastic) - are you just referring to a large carbon load in glass recycling since it has to be heated up so much? What's your source on this? 3. IBM research just invented a new PET recycling process that handles colored plastic called VOLCAT which is pretty cool! look it up if u wanna i'm pretty passionate about waste and recycling and the government regulation and economic and environmental impacts of it so i am DEEPLY interested in where you got your opinions from! (also if you ever need a researcher/writer for crash course environmental studies let me know :) )
@perplexedprimate5 жыл бұрын
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@linnsansvinnsan5 жыл бұрын
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@neamarjavaara97975 жыл бұрын
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@iandonaldpaul5 жыл бұрын
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@03Destinee5 жыл бұрын
100% agree. Everyone should check their local regulations, for example where I live caps should only be left on if they have the same plastic number as the bottle. Most don't so they should be left off & recycled separately if they have their own recycling number or put into the trash :( if they don't have a number.
@opalessance5 жыл бұрын
Thanks Hank! Keep on giving me perspective to share with those I attempt to positively influence. I Love You! And also whoever reads this!
@phantomstrider5 жыл бұрын
There's a whole lot our society has the right to be mad at Coca-Cola for.
@WouldntULikeToKnow.3 жыл бұрын
And Nestlé
@KCRambles5 жыл бұрын
Love everything about this video - another fine example of your research and passion yielding digestible and shareable important knowledge. As a business owner and marketer of some 25+ years, the best business gem you delivered is even more applicable in one's day to day life and attitude: Compete on the Product - Not on the Bottle. #DFTBA
@schelsullivan5 жыл бұрын
As a kid growing up in the 70s and 80s I remember taking our glass soda bottles back to the grocery store for Discount I'm purchasing a new eight pack of sodas. I assume they went back to the bottlers were washed refill the product recapped and shipped back out to the grocery stores again.
@TheRepublicOfUngeria Жыл бұрын
I like how you inadvertently summed up our modern economy so succinctly: no one understands almost anything, but a few people do understand each little thing, and that's enough.
@LogicalWaste5 жыл бұрын
A local dairy here uses Glass bottles for their Milks. They charge a $1 deposit per bottle and you bring them back to the dairy and they have sterilize them all and re-use them. the only waste is a small plastic pop-off lid. But they use a Biodegradable plastic based off sugar-cane. and even better, their Chocolate milk is amazing!
@tayloralcantar86135 жыл бұрын
That's very cool. What's the brand?
@whytho17075 жыл бұрын
We have a dairy company in Arizona that sells all their milk products in glass bottles. The cool thing they do is they will pay customers $2 for every glass that they return at the store, so they can reuse the bottles. After seeing this video it's cool to see I know of a company reusing their glass.
@KarolaTea5 жыл бұрын
Our glass collection containers seperate into clear (white), green and brown (and presumably all other glass goes in there as well). Afaik seperating glass shards by colour with a sensor is fairly easy, would assume it's the same for PET plastic. So in theory they can just use the old green bottles to make green bottles again. But glass is pretty... It's also way more sturdy than those flimsy plastic bottles or aluminium cans. And thus great for reusing. We have a glass bottle deposit system here, so each bottle gets reused up to 50 times before being recycled. (although since glass is heavy it's best used for local products that don't have to travel far) Oh yeah, those re-use bottles are also standardised. Some companies have their own special ones, which still get reused (glass and thick plastic), it just makes it more of a hassle to return them in the right shops. I love that a lot of musicians have taken to making their CD cases paper :D
@ameliebelfiore85885 жыл бұрын
Hank is authentic, funny, and educational all at the same time and I love it so much.
@jwhalstrom755 жыл бұрын
I am really passionate about this area of waste management. I would love sources or future videos on how all of these different things get recycled and what greater impacts are there of these systems.
@sophiesmall12025 жыл бұрын
In parts of Europe, supermarkets have bottle return machines, where you get a voucher for about 5 cents for every plastic bottle you return to the shop. They're fab because they encourage more recycling, but also because they help you understand (and recoup!) the cost of the packaging your product comes in. I wish we had those everywhere. (As well as standardised bottle shapes!)
@AsteroidEssence5 жыл бұрын
I love this video, but you completely made my day when you gave me the knowledge that you have seen and own Clue the movie.
@stoosies5 жыл бұрын
Scotland are currently implementing a bottle return scheme. All beverage cases- plastic, glass and aluminium will cost 20p more and you get 20p back when returning to be reused or recycled. This is really good for 4 reasons: - it financially gives the packaging a cost and so brings them into the economy in that way - it's incentive for people to recycle, not for free any more because there is a return for that - there is incentive to buy less - extra money gained from unreturned bottles is going to be used to subsidize recycling and reusing plants
@barrowc5 жыл бұрын
I'm old enough to remember the previous system where glass bottles in Scotland could be returned to get your deposit back - I remember it being a 10p deposit back in the 80s. Irn-Bru kept it going longer than anyone else but all the local companies selling bottles of ginger used to take their glass bottles back too. Glad to see we are going back to a bottle return scheme and extending it to plastic and aluminium too. It's a pity that the HDPE milk bottles are going to be excluded though
@HaiderMatrix5 жыл бұрын
I had a coca cola ad when I opened this video, lol..
@MamguSian5 жыл бұрын
As a kid I made extra pocket money taking glass bottles back to the shop to collect the deposit you used to have to pay. I think the bottles were re-used rather than recycled. Also my mum remembers taking treacle and syrup tins to the shop to be refilled. Great stuff Hank! Keep up the good work.
@milandjuric80435 жыл бұрын
Another problem with non biodegradable polymers is that small strands of the stuff (after a bottle has be decomposed by sun) are going to get everywhere and last for a long long time. Basically, by trowing away polymer products we are filling the global ecosystem with molecules it can do nothing about, some of which are harmful, some of which we don't know the effects of. That is not a wise think to do, one would say.
@juliacastillo19355 жыл бұрын
They've already found micro-plastics in humans which is a big yikes
@matthewleconey98135 жыл бұрын
While biodegradable polymers are a good idea in theory, one of the biggest problems with the currently developed ones is that they usually need to be in specific conditions to degrade properly (something usually not found in a landfill setting or nature). The other issue is that because they are made of special polymers, they can't be recycled with other plastics and are inherently less stable to recycle. The real solution here is to avoid throwing away plastics in the first place and only using plastics that can be easily recycled.
@milandjuric80435 жыл бұрын
Why not just ban plastics for all non necesery uses (for packaging, consumer electronics etc) it is usualy just a cheaper alternative but we are paying a much greater cost that is not measured by money
@EamaneEarane5 жыл бұрын
I mostly agree, but also feel it is important to consider the effect waste has on wildlife, which wasn’t really mentioned here. A glass or plastic jar or bottle is not ever equivalent to a rock when you throw it away as there is the risk of an animal getting stuck in it. Or all the plastic ending up in the ocean where animals eat them by accident. And so on. We do need to reduce waste and be more responsible with how we dispose of it. It isn’t enough to for example regulate bottle shape and thickness.
@roy41735 жыл бұрын
People are recommending Crash Course Environmental Studies, and I think this hypothetical series needs all the unfiltered cursing kept in. Children need to understand that there's a time and place for profanity, and this is definitely one of those instances.
@dejahodge82035 жыл бұрын
Absofuckinglutly
@ambseyyy5 жыл бұрын
++++
@rehan84805 жыл бұрын
+
@innovativeatavist1595 жыл бұрын
Fuck yeah
@strausan5 жыл бұрын
I would patreon the fuck out of that
@mo0nkid5 жыл бұрын
I'd like to suggest that plastic bottles should still have at least two ridges (one near the top and one near the bottom) that are standard across all brands. I don't have a lot of strength in my left hand, which is my primary hand for non-writing or non-cane tasks. When I'm out and about and drinking out of a plastic bottle, the ridge at the top of a Gatorade bottle or the curve of a Coke bottle actually helps me keep it in my hand and not drop it (pretty much the only reason I don't drink most Pepsi products). PS before anyone comes at me with that "just ask someone to help you!" BS: Disabled people like to be independent, just like you do. I do not want to have to rely on someone else to hydrate or feed me, especially when I already rely on others to help me with so much.
@SomeoneBeginingWithI5 жыл бұрын
+
@Ayaya7875 жыл бұрын
This video embodies exactly how I feel about recycling. Recently I’ve put significant effort to avoid eating out due to waste concerns or buying McDonald’s beverages because of their plastic lining. Most people have an astoundingly linear view of recycling and with corporations lobbying to keep their “brand identity” of dimple-y bottles doesn’t inspire much faith that the system will change. Frankly I’ve just started exclusively choosing aluminium as my single use product of choice due to its ease of recycling. Even then, I was unaware of glass’ inefficiencies, so thanks for the knowledge, Hank!
@bartz0rt9285 жыл бұрын
Crash Course Life Cycle Analysis? The funny thing is that in the Netherlands, we don't really do landfills. The water table is so high in most places that there's too great a risk of contamination, and there's just not a lot of room. Instead, we have pretty high tech incinerators (at least a few of which also function as power plants). Glass gets both reused (beer bottles, which are mostly standardised like you suggested and have paper labels that are easy to remove due to water-soluable glue) and recycled (pretty much all other glass, I think it just displaces some of the raw materials). Plastic bottles are both reused (large (>1 liter) bottles have a return fee per bottle just like beer bottles, collection points at supermarkets) and trashed (smaller bottles, milk bottles). Plastics are also collected seperately from other trash for recycling. Recently, some geniuses realised that since it needs to be sorted anyway, you might as well collect metal trash (aluminium and steel) together with the plastic, since it's relatively easy to seperate out (big magnet for iron, big spinning magnet for aluminium). It's also pretty easy to seperate after incineration of course, but why first waste energy heating it up?
@saraviegas21415 жыл бұрын
Glass recycling works when it's not a single stream system (basically everywhere but America)
@jedigecko065 жыл бұрын
In my lifetime, glass recycling in the UK went from colour-segregated to single stream.
@juliacastillo19355 жыл бұрын
@@jedigecko06 it's not just glass recycling that's single-stream -- in most (all?) places in America, all recycling is single-stream unless you take it to a recycling center yourself.
@Brainlesss965 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much Hank for doing this video, it's really useful to look at the lifecycle costs of the products we use. I'm currently studying Environmental Science, with a focus in pollution control, and this is something we look at in my classes. However, one thing that people often overlook are the lifecycle costs of renewable energy. Most people want to think that renewables will last forever, but in reality they usually don't last more than 2-3 decades at best. Then you have too look at the costs of replacing them and then also disposing of them it actually adds up in a really bad way. While I imagine wind turbines are probably fairly easy to recycle, as their mostly metal, solar panels are a huge problem. Just like your were talking about with DVD's having a bunch of different things which make them hard to recycle, solar panels are much much worse. They have toxic elements like Cadmium, and Arsenic in them which makes disposing of them and recycling them a very dangerous proposition, and unfortunately we very well may need a lot of them. A couple of authors in their book, Roadmap to Nowhere, (which you can read for free roadmaptonowhere dot com) estimated that according to some of the most popular 100% wind water solar plans for the United States, we would need to keep bringing online 1.23 million square meters of solar panels every day.... FOREVER, in order to keep up with the old solar panels that need to be retired at the end of their lifespan. These are some of the other lifecycle costs we need to look at when we look at dealing with our energy. And to finish I'm certainly not saying that global warming isn't a thing we need to deal with desperately. I'm just saying that that we need to be very careful when we look at the solutions we are trying to implement in order to combat it, because sometimes they might end up doing almost as much harm as good.
@Corvus_albus5 жыл бұрын
Thank you Hank, that was a great insight into an important topic I have thought about less than I thought I had:)
@txsunnygirl5 жыл бұрын
This is very informative and helpful. I tend to worry a lot about waste without having enough knowledge to be confident in my buying, reusing, and recycling choices. So I appreciate this effort to provide information that helps me think critically. Thanks, Hank!
@thewinterizzy5 жыл бұрын
I love these videos. It’s like a director’s cut with commentary. Time to get cozy and have a little think-watch. 🤓 🍿
@rikareader93155 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much Hank!! I actually learned so much from this video, I had so many misconceptions about garbage and recycling that I had no clue about! Also, there tends to be so much of a culture of hopelessness around the environment and the more you know about it the more impossible it seems to help, yet this video is pointing out some pretty basic stuff that could feasibly change and make things better. Thank you!
@krellend205 жыл бұрын
I was prepared to be upset with Hank, but he's actually got it right. We don't need plastic bans, we need better recycling systems.
@KarolaTea5 жыл бұрын
I mean we could do both? Or reuse plastic. If you make the bottles a bit thicker they can be refilled (10 times or more? can't find exact numbers, but something like that). Which afaik requires less energy than recycling them every single time, and ofc also increases the whole lifecycle of the plastic, cause every time you melt it again the quality drops a little.
@oneofmanyjames-es16435 жыл бұрын
What about the end of the video where he literally points to the thick plastic bottle and goes 'this should be illegal'? We need both.
@oftinuvielskin90205 жыл бұрын
I was thinking of whether it would be feasible to shift to a raw product approach where the vendor buys the drink in bulk and people bring their reusable bottles to fill them.
@SomeoneBeginingWithI5 жыл бұрын
@@oftinuvielskin9020 That would probably be difficult with carbonated drinks. But with other stuff that usually comes in plastic like liquid shampoos or dry foods that could work. My student co-op buys rice and pasta and lentils and nuts in bulk, and then we can bring our own jars to fill and pay by weight. People with allergies and celiac disease would still need access to plastic packaged products to prevent contamination so they don't get sick, but for most people, dry foods could go into re-usable packaging.
@illfayted5 жыл бұрын
@@SomeoneBeginingWithI Isn't that kind of how it used to be with glass bottle soda vending machines, you returned the bottle and they were washed and refilled with more soda and sold again. Even the metal bottle tops were collected when you used the opener, and I assume reused or recycled.
@darcieanderson71695 жыл бұрын
I really love this! I am studying marine science, so I am super into plastics, waste management and how to make things more sustainable. I do weekly beach cleans and the sad thing is most of the products are avoidable. Once I saw the packaging for my favourite candy on the beach it hasn't seemed like such a necessary part of my life. Instead of buying soft drinks in plastic,glass or tin, I choose to make my own syrups from scratch- The raw ingredients like the sugar, lemons and ginger may still have the high carbon air miles, however at least the waste on my end is compostable. I know that I go beyond what most people are happy to do, but I don't want my career to be finding out how our previous actions have fucked everything up. Also, PLEASE DO A CRASH COURSE ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES IT WOULD BE INCREDIBLE!
@UltraHuman5 жыл бұрын
I have had dreams about being in a collapsed society when people have to be sent into ancient landfills to mine out the valuable aluminum and bits of metal and plastic solids. It's dangerous work because of the toxic slimes and gases, but out of the rubbles humans build meager villages. In other news, the most ideal way to get tasty beverages is from local companies who use glass bottle deposit system where they reuse them. That's super rare but some Portland, Oregon companies have done it, some still do, same with the Eugene area. You can also use your own glass growlers and fill them at tap houses with places that carry local companies. Here in Eugene we have Townsheds Kombucha for soda-like non-alcoholic beverage and plenty of beers. They use big reusable barrels, usually aluminum so their lighter, to supply the taps, too. With that system the only waste is in the transportation and product production, so getting at those things from a company that's production is within a couple hundred miles helps lower that a lot. 💖🏞️🍄💗
@juliacastillo19355 жыл бұрын
THIS
@ojiverdeconfleco5 жыл бұрын
This blew my mind. We will apply this new information at home. Thank you, Hank!
@ChristsAthleticMusic5 жыл бұрын
“Compete on the product, not the bottle” lol yup. Well said hank
@weirdral5 жыл бұрын
I love that even though Hank doesn't work for ecogeek anymore, he's still passionate and enthusiastic about it and wants us all to be better.
@thelastcube.5 жыл бұрын
wow, I never really thought about fancy bumpy/dimple filled bottles taking more plastic to make and the cap ring thing hindering recycling efficiency even though it's so obvious
@RamblingsOfAnElfpire5 жыл бұрын
This is what I needed today. I've been thinking more and more about what I can change in my own life to help the environment and plastics are just infuriating at this point. You've made me think of aspects of the issue that I'd never even considered and made me even more determined to make changes.
@connierobinson10905 жыл бұрын
“Poured a bunch of LSD in it” LMAO thats the most boomer thing Hank has ever said
@imaginextramusic55303 жыл бұрын
Feels like a prayer
@maritrndal8152 жыл бұрын
i believe it was a reference to the movie "good time", but that might be me reading into it also oh god sorry for answering a 2 year old comment
@jaelikesjackalopes2 жыл бұрын
hank is gen x
@imaginextramusic55302 жыл бұрын
@@jaelikesjackalopes why?
@shoeberrypie2 жыл бұрын
If only there were people filling bottles with LSD. 😂 Maybe a boomer will drink it and realize they're projecting their own entitlement onto children, while they donate their inheritance to charities in the most competitive job market in recent history.
@muthukumaranl5 жыл бұрын
All i can say is i wish more people "see this" (the point)....thank you Hank for the time & the thoughts!
@ryantaylor47665 жыл бұрын
I agree with removing unnecessary bumps and colorations and making the rings easier to remove, but I think thicker plastic can have a value in reuseability. The water in my house had a problem last summer and we had to buy a 40 pack of bottled water at the grocery store to drink, and all those bottles were really thin and efficient, but they also all went straight into the recycling because they were so fragile. I bought a bottle of dasani water out of a vending machine on my first day of classes last September, carried it around in my backpack 4 days a week, and didn't recycle it until I was moving out of my dorm in May, and it was still as structurally sound as it was the day I bought it. That one bottle may have used more plastic, but I used a lot less plastic than I would have if I'd had to buy a new bottle every week.
@sydmushas5 жыл бұрын
i have been thinking over this for a few months now. has legitimately kept me up at night. thank you!
@johnhenrybussey5 жыл бұрын
Please do Crash Course Environmental Studies (someone else commented this I'm just trying to signal boost, yes I liked it and left a "+" reply)
@wraitholme2 жыл бұрын
This should be played at least once a day on every tv and radio station on the planet
@rfldss895 жыл бұрын
Aren't soda plastic bottles thicker to account for the pressure needed to keep the CO2 dissolved?
@robertofontiglia41485 жыл бұрын
Take a shitty, flimsy water bottle, and try and inflate it if you want. You'll see, it holds the pressure up very well...
@Wltrwllyngaeiou5 жыл бұрын
Holding pressure (not exploding) is very different from preventing diffusion of gas through the bottle over the course of months
@robertofontiglia41485 жыл бұрын
@@Wltrwllyngaeiou didn't know that happened, but I'm a bit skeptical about how it might occur. Like, in a sealed bottle, even a flimsy one, how much pressure will leak through ?
@Wltrwllyngaeiou5 жыл бұрын
I couldn't find any great sources on this, but it seems pretty well established that soda stored in plastic bottles goes flat in a year or so. If I remember my transport class correctly, the concentration of CO2 "dissolved" in the walls of the bottle decays exponentially with distance from the inside of the container. So going even slightly thinner would dramatically reduce that lifetime.
@robertofontiglia41485 жыл бұрын
@@Wltrwllyngaeiou Fascinating ! I never would've thought ! Well even when I think I know stuff, I really don't eh ? Thanks ! Mind you, if I kept soda in the house I might've stumbled on the fact myself, but there you go !
@francoisrd5 жыл бұрын
Great and insightful video, Hank, but you missed two points about recycling. 1. Landfills aren't just piles of stuff. They contain food in a no-oxygen environment, which releases literal tons of green house gases. Less stuff in landfills means smaller landfills which means easier management of these kinds of issues. 2. If the stuff doesn't end up in landfills, but also isn't recycled, it will inevitably make its way to the ocean, where it causes a shit load of problems for all life, including humans (or at least any human that like to eat stuff that come from the sea). So recycling isn't just about not extracting more material from the earth, it also prevents those two problems. Also, on the topic of extracting from the earth, you mainly focused on the carbon footprint of extraction, but the other issue is scarcity. Every resource is finite and the more you extract, the more carbon-intense any future extraction becomes (because companies always extract the easiest and cheapest stuff first to save money, so in the end only the expensive and hard to extract stuff is left).
@fornavnetternavn62795 жыл бұрын
Green plastic helps with shielding the content from light btw👀
@greghazmat1915 жыл бұрын
This is so good, and such an important thing people need to know. They need to learn to think in this way. Didn't know it was harder to recycle glass! Will definitely change my behaviour.
@TheFourthWinchester5 жыл бұрын
There is a huge problem which you didn't touch upon. When these landfills fill every town and village, it seeps into the underground water contaminating everything. Not to mention the stink it raises for miles upon miles. And if electronics find their way in there, then the ground would die and pollute the water with heavy metals which is ingested by people.
@vivianloney88265 жыл бұрын
I'm so glad so many youtubers are coming out and talking about these types of things! Have to disagree with you when it comes to glass products, however. Carbon footprint is one thing, but holistically the environmental impact of quartz mining (usually just your basic gravel mine) is not comparable to the environmental impact of drilling for oil and fracking. Virgin glass >>>> virgin plastics. While the carbon footprint of recycling glass is larger, it is negligible when looking at global CO2 output. Therefore not one of the battles I'd pick when it comes to climate change. More important issues include shipping via air and animal agriculture.
@albasapri32655 жыл бұрын
I'd never even thought about that aspect of glass 🤦
@Naiadryade5 жыл бұрын
Same... I'm going to be saving and reusing glass containers from now on.
@ellw78305 жыл бұрын
+
@shavono84022 жыл бұрын
On the bottle thing: Everyone's cans already basically look the same already, and guess what? They're doing fine! The businesses have found ways to market that don't involve the SHAPE OF THE PACKAGE as much! Thanks for making me think about things in a way I've never thought about before.
@raraavis77825 жыл бұрын
Hm..Im surprised by what you say about glas recycling. Is that an American thing? Because from what I know, recycling glas works fairly well and actually is quite energy/resource saving here. Although of course, bottles that go straight back for refill are preferable. I mainly have recyclable glas from stuff like tomato sauce or gherkins, not drinks. It’s kinda hard, to avoid them there.
@TheSylda5 жыл бұрын
As far as I understand (from my sister, who got it from work and she works in a lab that researches water and soil pollution) recycling glass is less intensive than making new glass (which is actually quite energy and resource intensive that's why sand theft is a thing) and depending on the local requirements might be less polluting than reusing glass because some of the products they use to clean glass bottles are quite nasty.
@raraavis77825 жыл бұрын
TheSylda Ah, thanks for the confirmation. It’s really one damn thing after another with trying to live environmentally friendly.
@oliverwilson115 жыл бұрын
It takes the same amount of energy to melt glass regardless of what country you do it in. Recycled glass is a bit easier to make than new glass, but aluminium is better for recycling because recycled aluminium is SO MUCH easier to make than new aluminium.
@zofiabochenska12405 жыл бұрын
And, unfortunatelly, glass is super heavy which means transporting it uses much, much more carbon. Sadly, most of plastic alternatives are way less energy efficient.
@fangjiunnewe36345 жыл бұрын
That's right glass is the most material efficient in recycling because it is the least transformed between each use-form and requires the least new raw material input. New glass requires a lot of processing to clear the SiO2 of slag but that's all pretty much not required in recycling glass, while on the other hand thermoplastic polymer chains undergoes scission after remelt so their quality drops regardless and new raw material input is needed to maintain quality. Also, the argument for recycling isn't to avoid landfills or to conserve energy, it's to reduce/slow down resource excavation. Carbon/mineral/ore extraction is moving material from underground to above ground, taxing the cycles that balance them, hence increased atmospheric carbon because the aboveground system is not a strong enough sink. True carbon neutral (and material neutral) means no more excavation of material to be moved above ground, and honestly we need to capture and rebury them. In that sense, landfills actually work somewhat, especially land reclamation landfills, which bury the trash and turn it into land. It's infertile and could leach plastic degradation products, but at least it's buried back down.
@susannastorytime Жыл бұрын
Wow! 😮 This got real emotional. I never felt so much emotions about plastic. Hank made me see plastic in a whole new light.
@kuronosan5 жыл бұрын
Clear plastic is not always the best for the contents inside. Light can accelerate decomposition and other chemical processes.
@SomeoneBeginingWithI5 жыл бұрын
I think this is the case for medicines which are sold in dark glass bottles, but I don't think that's the reason for the sprite bottles to be green. Do you know an example of something which is sold in dark plastic for decomposition reasons?
@ProsaicPudding5 жыл бұрын
Glass can be recycled in a really fun way, but not into more glass. In my county, glass is collected to be broken up and used as filler for road projects in place of sand (because ground up glass is basically just sand). Apparently it's pretty cost effective, and it doesn't suffer from the same issues with impurities a lot of other recycling streams have. Good to remember that secondary uses are also a legitimate form of recycling. Thanks for the great video Hank. :)
@Azzarinne5 жыл бұрын
**watches Vlogbrothers video** **is so ready for a hankschannel discussion** **has to go to appointment** **pulls into parking lot** **gets notification** **sigh**
@rtkt5 жыл бұрын
Please Hank, inform us more about the health dangers of everyday use things, people need to be informed and you are doing a great work! Thank you!
@thewinterizzy5 жыл бұрын
... I always throw the bottle caps away (I was told once in my childhood they were not recyclable I’m sure and I never thought to question it), and then recycle the actual bottle. I never once thought about removing the little circle thing and yet in retrospect that seems painfully obvious. Ahhh. 😅💀
@andromedasmoons36475 жыл бұрын
This was so highly informative and I'm very grateful! I used to pick glass over plastic and even cardboard packaging because I thought it was easier to recycle and better for the planet. I also like that you talked about an aluminum can or a piece of glass that we see as trash is just a rock. I never thought about it that way before. I'd love to see more videos like this in the future, and not just from your channel. :)
@OmniPlatypus5 жыл бұрын
Glass is easier to recycle than plastic. No fumes released, less heat needed to melt it than using raw ingredients. It is also inert, which plastic is not. So it's better for preserving food and drinks and better to recycle.
@ronpeck635 жыл бұрын
Nailed it! So good, Hank. Spot on, buddy, spot on. 👍🏼
@Jackallleo5 жыл бұрын
This video has largely made me realise JUST how completely useless the entirety of Coca Cola is. Like, I’d just love to ask the CEO of the Coca Cola company to give me one good reason for it to actually exist. Because clearly the fact that I love and get to drink Coke Zero and the company gets to make a huge amount of money is in no way worth the astonishing environmental cost.
@kevinwells97515 жыл бұрын
Could you not say the same thing about the vast majority of entertainment? TV shows and movies have a large environmental cost as well, as does the running of the internet. Some of it is valuable to society, but a lot of it is unnecessary and just environmentally costly. But do I want the government to make superfluous internet use illegal? Definitely not
@Jackallleo5 жыл бұрын
@@kevinwells9751 Absolutely, and I'm not even saying the Coca Cola company _shouldn't_ exist. It's just an interesting reflection of how extravagant a lot of day-to-day things are.
@LucaMasters5 жыл бұрын
Coca Cola, as with every for-profit corporation, exists because we pay them to exist, and they do what they do because we pay them to do it. If you're ever mad at a company for doing something (See: the memes about how 100 companies produce 71% of carbon emissions), just remember that companies will always and only do what we pay them to do. They're not moral agents of their own. They're aggregations of our consumer decisions.
@jzimmerman62385 жыл бұрын
Clearly our taste buds heightened sensitivity to sugars, and the pleasurable chemicals our bodies release to tell us we got the ripest fruit, are what drive the popularity of sodas. By purchasing fruits to quench this chemical desire we support farmers, and the actual plant life that maintains earth's livability for all species. Or we can succumb to the bombardment of merchandising propaganda and produce an existential garbage problem.
@04beni045 жыл бұрын
I was actually drinking Coke Zero while watching this video. A fountain drink out of a cup, so no plastic or glass that I know about, but still. I have mixed emotions about this.
@arinelle855 жыл бұрын
The focus on the separating the plastic on the plastic bottles is interesting, because in Japan, they have a designated bag for the PET bottle, but you're expected to remove the label and the cap from that bottle before you recycle it (note: there are places where you just toss in the whole bottle still though). And all the Japanese bottles I've used don't have the soft plastic part in the lids, and the labels are easy to remove. It's intriguing how different countries and jurisdictions handle their recycling streams.
@davingros56985 жыл бұрын
What's your source for glass being badd to recycle it's literally the only product we use that's 100% recyclable with no degradation
@TechnMagician5 жыл бұрын
It's the fact that a glass bottle going into a landfill isn't bad, it's just silicon dioxide, and melting down a glass bottle to reuse it isn't any better then just creating new glass. When you recycle a plastic bottle you save them from having to pump crude oil, then do a bunch of work on the crude oil to turn it into plastic. So you save a lot of energy by recycling plastic, while glass saves barely any.
@kareemelrefaay53005 жыл бұрын
He didn’t say that he just pointed that glass need alot of energy in recycling and it’s not harmful to soil
@KarolaTea5 жыл бұрын
My guess is that it just requires a lot of energy to melt it.
@emilybarner34405 жыл бұрын
This is also my understanding.
@AlRoderick5 жыл бұрын
The cost to sort and clean the bottles plus transport them back to a glass plant and melt it into new glass is significantly more than just melting new silica sand that's moved in bulk.
@abbeyripko99995 жыл бұрын
this is a really good take on plastic vs glass and metal trash. i never thought about it that way. didn't know that glass was much harder to remake into new products, i just thought it was melted and reformed (which seemed easy enough to me). love hearing people talk about trash and its life cycle
@rooseveltrdPR5 жыл бұрын
i like getting products in glass, but only because I wash and use them as storage containers and drink ware.
@xzonia15 жыл бұрын
I don't drink sodas (except ginger ale when I have nausea ... from a can), so I never really think about this. Thanks, Hank! I learned a lot in this video.
@jedigecko065 жыл бұрын
No punishment for dumping this video on Vlogbrothers. This video is educational.
@toobusytocreateaname5 жыл бұрын
jedigecko06 +
@sarameg375 жыл бұрын
So many great moments in this. Thanks for educating us with anger Hank!
@Petch855 жыл бұрын
It is had to understand how bad you are to reuse and recycle ind the US. Where I live we have a small "pant/deposit" on every bottle that you get back when you return them. The glass bottles are reuse and the plastic is recycled. We also have glass containers where all the glass without a "pant/deposit" can be delivered it is the sorted into more than 100 different types of jars and bottles. Broken glass are remelted (It only takes 1/7 of the energy of creating glass in the first place) or it can be reused at glass wool if the quality is low. I think there is a good case to make for glass vs plastic. plastic often end up en nature, it can be blown around by the wind, and it just feels like worthless waste, where as glass is not thrown away as much it might be due to the feeling of quality, stiffness or the weight but I see less glass in nature than I see cans and plastic bottles. Also we need to remember that the packaging in some cases protect something that also to a lot over resources to make, thus in some cases the packaging might be ok. The colors can actually also be used to protect the product, the dark wine bottles are used to protect the wine from sunlight. Crash Course Enviommental Studies should cover this. How to reuse, recycle and when packaging is good or bad. Looking forward for that. :-)
@ambseyyy5 жыл бұрын
out of curiosity, where do you live?
@Petch855 жыл бұрын
@@ambseyyy You probably already have a good idea of the approximations location, but I live en Denmark.
@SomeoneBeginingWithI5 жыл бұрын
+
@wanderingoff135 жыл бұрын
I learned way more than i expected to from this video, especially re:glass. I always assumed it was easy to recycle because it's easy to clean and basically unadulterated (like, there aren't 4 types of glass in one bottle). I already reuse some glass jars but it's good to know i should make more of an effort to reuse or avoid it as packaging.
@RithSV5 жыл бұрын
VOSS water, am I right
@lyreparadox5 жыл бұрын
To be fair, I love those bottles. But I also reuse the sh!t outta them. Basically until the plastic cap breaks or degrades or gets gross. It'd be awesome if we had standardized (glass) bottles - then you could have 3rd party businesses that make infinitely reusable caps instead of plastic ones.
@leahwilton7855 жыл бұрын
My mom and I were just recently arguing about what gets recycled, only to be very confused to learn that glass isn't recyclable where we live. So thanks for inadvertently solving our questions Hank
@hunterpopkin83705 жыл бұрын
What if we just recycle society?
@ElijahCem5 жыл бұрын
Hunter Popkin that’s a high key mood right there
@victoriatucker62715 жыл бұрын
Best suggestion yet
@tengwarsenna3 жыл бұрын
This whole argument is fascinating, and makes me think about where I live, glass beer bottles are standardized like this. You get your bottle deposit back when you return them to a beer vendor, they collect them all, move them to a cleaning plant, then the beer makers put new product in the washed bottles. You are still paying for all the transport, but the bottles are reused many times. You can actually tell how many times a bottle has been used because they put a little dot of glass on the bottom of the bottle every time it's reused.