• Dalraz
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    9 months ago

    Standardized sizes, weights and where possible packages. Regulate the living shit out of them

    • Nik282000
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      9 months ago

      A fuck ton of products could be shipped in reusable/recyclable glass container but no govt will ever force it. All condiments, dressings, jams, pickles etc. could fit in a dozen standard sized container that could be returned for a deposit (like beer bottles) and then reused by manufactures.

      • phx
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        9 months ago

        Yeah I’ve often wondered about stuff like bringing back “the milkman” and other such things. People could put out their old glassware for cleaning/re-use and have fresh product delivered in a new container. Stores are already back to doing home delivery for groceries.

        It’d also bring back a whole genre of bad jokes about parentage.

        • Nik282000
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          9 months ago

          Up until the bridge was built PEI had reusable glass bottles for pop, it saved the cost of shipping trash back to the mainland by boat. So it is very much doable in modern Canada. If rolled out nation wide it could be sold as a system to other countries. Because you’ll never get it done here unless there is some ROI other than ‘we dont all die in a mountain of plastic.’

      • Rob Bos
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        9 months ago

        Mandate the Mason/Bernardin form factors. Plenty of sizes, swappable lids, and afaik an open standard. /nod

        That said, aluminum is super cheap to recycle and very light. I think that might be as good if not better. Crank up the deposit on the cans.

        • Nik282000
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          9 months ago

          I like aluminum cans as well but I think it is more energy intense to melt them down and re-manufacture them compared to cleaning and refilling glass. It also has to be used to store products that are under pressure, most of a beer can’s strength comes from the pressure inside!

          • Rob Bos
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            9 months ago

            Yeah, though aluminum also has the advantage of being orders of magnitude lighter, so you save a lot on fuel for shipping at every stage of the process. Plus a glass bottle can only be used as a bottle: recycled aluminum is more flexible.

            So it could easily tilt in favour of aluminum I think. BUt you’re right that it’s not clear-cut.

            • Rodeo
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              9 months ago

              There used to be a glass plant near the town where I grew up.

              The bottles don’t just get washed and refilled. They’re melted down and recast, just like aluminum. But the process is much less energy intensive.

              Aluminum oxide (the natural form of aluminum as it reacts with the atmosphere) just so happens to have an extremely high melting point. Aluminum smelters must use all three of pressure, heat, and electrolysis to get the oxygen to burn off and liquefy the aluminum. Glass and even steel need only heat. I don’t know what the final environmental impact is, but the energy input at the point of smelting is much higher for aluminum.

    • Showroom7561
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      9 months ago

      I guarantee that corporations would simply start adding more cheap fillers to food if they were forced to comply with standardized size/weight requirements.

      You’d get saline solution being injected into moisture rich foods, to increase their perceived weight, you’d have dry foods combined with super cheap fillers to give them more weight (but less actual food), etc.

      Consumers are always the loser.

      • Grimpen
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        9 months ago

        You kind of already have that. I’m pretty sure that the mass of anything in the grocery store includes the maximum amount of allowed cheap mass.

        Standardised packaging sizes would just reduce wastage from inconvenient package sizes and streamline packaging operations. Remember the giant plastic clamshell packaging of 10-15 years ago? Takes up more space on the shelves, can make a small product noticable, and was annoying as hell and wasteful too.