Thursday, 15 June 2017

What the cup?

BY JESSICA ROUSE

The Hunter is just one contributor to Australia's growing waste problem and with waste growing at double the rate of our population with 52 mega tonnes a year, something needs to be done.

Disposable coffee cups are at the top of the list of contributors to the problem with 98 per cent of paper coffee cups not recyclable due to a coating of polyethylene plastic and therefore often end up in landfill.

A huge 1.2 of the 3 million coffees sold daily in cafes throughout Australia are being poured into these disposable cups, which is equal to half a billion disposable cups in landfill every year, and that's just in Australia alone.

But, a former University of Newcastle student is trying to combat the problem - he's created a reusable SmartCup which coffee lovers can use again and again instead of using a paper coffee cup.

The frank green SmartCup and SmartBottle are combatting the growing waste problem one cup of coffee at a time, and creator Ben Young says what makes his 100 per cent reusable cups so great is actually what makes them so different.

"It's a very different product offering to our competitors particularly around style, the fact they don't leak, they're made of premium materials and one thing we're very unique about is we do everything here in Australia 100 per cent."

A three-part abcTV series War on Waste airing recently highlighted just how big the waste problem is in Australia giving more traction to the frank green company but they've already been operating for a couple of years both here in Australia and overseas.

Ben says being able to reuse a product is much more beneficial than simply recycling a product.

"People are worried about biodegradable cups, but to me, they're missing the point. The point is it takes a whole heap of energy and resources and plastic and paper to make any cup - that's one really important point that gets lost in this whole war on waste thing. It's not about whether they're recyclable or not, it's about not having them in the first instance."