Dunkin' Donuts, our favorite coffee, tea and sandwich restaurant chain is ditching their styrofoam cups in a couple of years. It's been in the works for years, but there was a lot more involved in it because they had to make the customers happy... Here's the story:
Dunkin’ Donuts Plans To Finally Get Rid Of Styrofoam Cups By 2020
After years of teasing plans to eliminate styrofoam cups from all of its stores, Dunkin’ Donuts says it’s finally ready to deliver.
Dunkin’ Donuts Plans To Finally Get Rid Of Styrofoam Cups By 2020
After years of teasing plans to eliminate styrofoam cups from all of its stores, Dunkin’ Donuts says it’s finally ready to deliver.
The popular coffee chain announced on Wednesday that all of its styrofoam cups
will be replaced with sustainably sourced, double-walled paper cups by
2020. That milestone achievement, which the company said would eliminate
nearly 1 billion foam cups from the waste stream annually, follows
Dunkin’ announcing a similar goal for 2016.
Though the company missed that mark, it’s not because they haven’t been trying, a Dunkin’ spokesperson said.
In
an email to HuffPost on Thursday, the company said replacing the foam
cups has been a “No. 1 priority issue,” but suggested that an unpopular
lid is to blame for the delay.
Instead of styrofoam cups, Dunkin’ Donuts plans to offer these double-walled paper cups |
Customers not preferring a certain lid may sound like a small issue ― especially when compared to styrofoam’s detrimental impact on the world’s landfills ― but when it came to their business, it mattered.
“Transitioning
9,000 restaurants from our iconic foam coffee cup is a big decision
that has implications for our franchisees’ bottom line and the guest
experience, and we did not want to take it lightly,” the company said.
Nearly six years ago, the company said in a 2012 corporate report that
they hoped to find a more environmentally friendly cup within the next
two to three years. This followed five years of unsuccessful searching
for an alternative product that has “the necessary manufacturing
capabilities, availability of raw materials, the ability to meet food
safety requirements, thermal qualities, and environmental attributes
such as recyclability or biodegradability.”
The winning solution: Trading out the foam and keeping the stores’ current lid.
The
new cups, which Dunkin’ plans to begin rolling out this spring, will be
composed of paperboard that’s certified to the Sustainable Forestry
Initiative Standard, the company said.
Though
the more eco-conscious cups may feel different, the company insists
that it will keep beverages just as hot as its current foam cups and
that an extra sleeve won’t be needed to keep hands cool.
Dunkin’s anti-styrofoam announcement follows that of McDonald’s, which vowed last month to make its packaging
100 percent green by 2025. That means that all of its consumer
packaging will be made out of renewable, recyclable and certified
materials within seven years. Recycling bins are also being added to all
of its stores.
McDonald’s previously vowed to eliminate foam packaging from its global supply chain by the end of 2018.
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