Some restaurants move away from single-use plastic to reusable containers

A small but growing number of restaurants are adopting reusable take-out containers to reduce plastic waste, with programs like Recirclable leading the charge.

Meg Wilcox reports for Civil Eats.


In short:

  • Johnny’s Luncheonette in Massachusetts offers reusable take-out containers through the Recirclable program, which customers return to participating restaurants.
  • Despite higher upfront costs, reusable containers can save money over time and reduce environmental impact, according to reuse advocates.
  • Nationwide, startups and nonprofits are supporting reuse infrastructure, with programs emerging in major cities and institutions.

Key quote:

"Reuse is just smart. It’s smart resource-wise. It’s smart cost-wise."

— Kay Masterson, owner of Johnny’s Luncheonette.

Why this matters:

The concept is simple yet revolutionary: instead of single-use plastic containers that end up in landfills or, worse, our oceans, patrons receive their meals in sturdy, reusable containers. These are then returned, sanitized, and reused, creating a sustainable loop that drastically cuts down on waste.

For the environmentally aware consumer, this is a win-win. They get to enjoy their favorite meals without the guilt of contributing to plastic pollution. For restaurants, it's an opportunity to align with green practices and appeal to a growing demographic that prioritizes sustainability.

About the author(s):

EHN Curators
EHN Curators
Articles curated and summarized by the Environmental Health News' curation team. Some AI-based tools helped produce this text, with human oversight, fact checking and editing.

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