Eco friendly drinks bottles.
Discussion
ingelow said:
Interesting product, firmly in the "why didn't I think of that" category. Not sure I like the implementation, or the use-cases, but other than that. However, I don't see that as a solution to (what I take to be) the OP's question!simple101 said:
Do they exist? Other than re using old bottles, or using recycled plastic, are there any other good eco friendly bottles out there?
My customer base would be more inclined to buy from me knowing that the planet is no worse off.
Don't supply in bottles at all? Ignoring the make-up of the bottles themselves, they remain a very inefficient solution to the problem of moving liquids around, and hard to justify - in any form - as an "eco friendly" option, IMHO.My customer base would be more inclined to buy from me knowing that the planet is no worse off.
Can you give us a clue as to what you're trying to package?
Scraggles said:
mailed the waterbobble peeps, 300 uses for the filter, not sold anywhere in the uk
Harvey Nichols are supposed to be selling them from 30th July.http://www.harveynichols.com/output/page972.asp
There has been a scare about re-using plastic water bottles, something to do with chemicals in the plastic leeching into the water so check round for any scares similar to that before you go too far down any line as the sort of person who is impressed by Eco friendliness may be the sort who buys into the latest Celeb lifestyle magazine health scare.
mmm-five said:
Scraggles said:
mailed the waterbobble peeps, 300 uses for the filter, not sold anywhere in the uk
Harvey Nichols are supposed to be selling them from 30th July.http://www.harveynichols.com/output/page972.asp
Also, you can't put the bottle in the dishwasher, you can't put the filter in the dishwasher, you can't get the bottles branded, you can't use the bobble with anything other than basic water.
I'm a little lost as to where the advantage really is!
Engineer1 said:
There has been a scare about re-using plastic water bottles, something to do with chemicals in the plastic leeching into the water so check round for any scares similar to that before you go too far down any line as the sort of person who is impressed by Eco friendliness may be the sort who buys into the latest Celeb lifestyle magazine health scare.
Generally an urban myth - http://www.snopes.com/medical/toxins/plasticbottle...idea is that you fill up with tap water and not buy umpteen bottles that are used once and thrown away
only use bottled water in the car for when on site as wear a fleece in all weathers, not fun atm, but getting MMMF on bare sweaty arms is not fun, akin to itching powder....
maybe if I bought a few they would post it by ship, but suspect air mail is the most likely route
only use bottled water in the car for when on site as wear a fleece in all weathers, not fun atm, but getting MMMF on bare sweaty arms is not fun, akin to itching powder....
maybe if I bought a few they would post it by ship, but suspect air mail is the most likely route
Scraggles said:
idea is that you fill up with tap water and not buy umpteen bottles that are used once and thrown away
only use bottled water in the car for when on site as wear a fleece in all weathers, not fun atm, but getting MMMF on bare sweaty arms is not fun, akin to itching powder....
maybe if I bought a few they would post it by ship, but suspect air mail is the most likely route
I understand what they're for. What I don't understand is why not buy a Brita filter (or an under-sink filter cartridge system) and just use any old bottle you have - a metal "hiking bottle" for instance, which can be washed and cleaned an essentially unlimited number of times and can be easily recycled?only use bottled water in the car for when on site as wear a fleece in all weathers, not fun atm, but getting MMMF on bare sweaty arms is not fun, akin to itching powder....
maybe if I bought a few they would post it by ship, but suspect air mail is the most likely route
I understand the market and the appeal. I just don't see how, if the OP is trying to present an "eco-friendly" image, these will stand more than the barest scrutiny.
OP: what are you trying to bottle? Have you considered cardboard cartons, which pack well, are made from recycled materials, and can easily be recycled?
errm is it just me that re-uses a plain old volvic bottle over and over?
I have never sued one 300 times btu i normally get a good 5 uses out of them before i inevitably lose them
yes the water (tap) water doesnt taste as good as when you buy it bottled but that usually down to it being warmer by the tiem i drink the re-used stuff down at the gym etc
I have never sued one 300 times btu i normally get a good 5 uses out of them before i inevitably lose them
yes the water (tap) water doesnt taste as good as when you buy it bottled but that usually down to it being warmer by the tiem i drink the re-used stuff down at the gym etc
simple101 said:
Do they exist? Other than re using old bottles, or using recycled plastic, are there any other good eco friendly bottles out there?
My customer base would be more inclined to buy from me knowing that the planet is no worse off.
I supply eco friendly plastic food trays to hospitals - big numbers of trays used on a daily basis. Happy to look into it for you if you want? PM me if you want more details/commercial info My customer base would be more inclined to buy from me knowing that the planet is no worse off.
I need to bottle non fizzy drinks such as water, orange juice and the like.
I have though about cartons and pouches but i thought i would start with bottles as it seemd the most common option.
Cartons can be packaged more efficiently though and could be made using recycled cardboard. Would need to look into the life span and how they react to freezing/refridgeration.
Turns out very few people have perfected 100% recycled containers. Ribena and innocent being the big ones. Naturally they are being tight lipped but innocent did pass me on to wrap.org... seem a very helpful bunch if anyone else is interested.
I have though about cartons and pouches but i thought i would start with bottles as it seemd the most common option.
Cartons can be packaged more efficiently though and could be made using recycled cardboard. Would need to look into the life span and how they react to freezing/refridgeration.
Turns out very few people have perfected 100% recycled containers. Ribena and innocent being the big ones. Naturally they are being tight lipped but innocent did pass me on to wrap.org... seem a very helpful bunch if anyone else is interested.
Carpie said:
Glass bottles.
I don't understand why everything isn't packaged in them.
Weight is one thing. Cost and the fact that of all the material that is recyclable, the benefits of recycling glass (cost, emissions, raw material preservation, etc.) are marginal.I don't understand why everything isn't packaged in them.
They are reusable (remember Corona Fizzy Drinks?) but manufacturing has spread far and wide so there are not the supply chains and logistics there once were to make collection and reuse a viability.
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