By Kimberly Chin and Julie Jargon
Big companies are responding to mounting pressure from customers
to stop serving drinks with plastic straws.
Starbucks Corp. and Hyatt Hotels Corp. on Monday said they would
phase out single-serve plastic straws and pledged to reduce
packaging waste from their drinks and meals.
McDonald's Corp., meanwhile, is phasing out plastic straws in
the U.K. and Ireland and testing alternatives made from other
materials in the U.S. Burger King, a unit of Restaurant Brands
International Inc., said it has committed to making all of its
packaging in the U.K. recyclable by 2025.
Executives say they are responding to advocacy groups and
customers who say the convenience of straws and other plastic
packaging isn't worth the environmental damage they can have,
particularly to the world's oceans. Eight million metric tons of
plastic enter the world's oceans every year, according to the Ocean
Conservancy.
A social media movement to stop using plastic straws took off in
2015 when a YouTube video showing a sea turtle with a straw stuck
in its nose went viral. Lawmakers have responded to the public
outcry as well. Officials in the U.K. said earlier this year that
they would ban the sale of single-use plastics, including straws,
as early as next year. That has put pressure on multinational
companies to make changes ahead of the ban.
"The first step as part of this commitment will be rolling out
biodegradable drinking straws in September 2018," a Burger King
spokesman said of the U.K. effort.
Seattle, where Starbucks is based, was the first U.S. city to
ban the use of plastic straws, effective July 1. McDonald's said
last week that it has been testing alternatives to the plastic
straw that it hopes to eventually introduce at its 14,000 U.S.
restaurants and globally.
Dunkin' Brands Group Inc. said in February that it will replace
foam cups with a double-walled paper model at all of its Dunkin'
Donuts coffee shops by 2020. Yum Brands Inc., which owns KFC, Pizza
Hut and Taco Bell, said it is working with suppliers on a number of
paper-based packaging options.
Chicago-based Hyatt on Monday said that after Sept. 1, straws
and picks will be available by request only at its more than 700
properties world-wide. "Eco-friendly alternatives" will be provided
where available, Hyatt said.
Some manufacturers could benefit from new demand for making some
of the 500 million drinking straws used in the U.S. every day out
of something other than plastic, said Tony Uphoff, president and
CEO of ThomasNet.com, a data company for industrial
manufacturers.
"Suppliers of straws made of paper, wood and other compostable
materials are positioning themselves to capitalize on the
opportunity," he said.
Starbucks is one of the biggest and well-known companies to make
such a move. It said Monday that it plans to phase out single-use
plastic straws from its more than 28,000 company-operated and
licensed stores by 2020.
The coffee giant said it would switch to a strawless lid or
straws made from a material other than plastic. Starbucks said it
expects that a specially designed strawless lid with a wider mouth
will become the standard for serving its iced coffee, tea and
espresso beverages.
The switch came in response to requests from both customers and
store employees, the company said, and became more urgent as cold
drinks -- typically slurped through straws -- surged in popularity.
Cold beverages comprised more than 50% of Starbucks's sales last
year, up from 37% five years ago. Starbucks said the shift will
eliminate more than a billion straws served at its stores
annually.
Starbucks already uses its strawless lid in more than 8,000
stores in the U.S. and Canada. The company is testing the lid on
Starbucks Draft Nitro beverages in China, Japan, Singapore,
Thailand and Vietnam as well.
Chief Executive Kevin Johnson called getting rid of plastic
straws a milestone for Starbucks's aspirations to deliver its food
and beverages "in more sustainable ways."
As You Sow, a nonprofit that advocates for corporate social
responsibility, requested in a shareholder proposal at Starbucks's
annual meeting in March that the coffee chain issue a report on its
sustainable packaging efforts and develop a more comprehensive plan
to eliminate plastic straws and other waste.
Starbucks recommended that shareholders vote against the
proposal, and it fell short of a majority.
Starbucks said at the time that it "has consistently established
sustainability goals, and transparently reported on progress and
acknowledged challenges."
Conrad MacKerron, senior vice president of As You Sow, said on
Monday that he was glad Starbucks had decided to do away with
plastic straws. He added that public officials also need to improve
composting programs to handle the increase in biodegradable straws
Starbucks is proposing to use.
"A big systemic change needs to happen," he said. "This kind of
material wouldn't break down in your backyard compost bin."
Starbucks has long encouraged customers to bring in their own
cups for coffee. The chain four years ago began selling a $1
reusable cup in the U.S. The chain has been experimenting with a
5-pence paper cup charge in London, which will extend to 950 stores
in the U.K. later in July.
Write to Julie Jargon at julie.jargon@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
July 09, 2018 14:30 ET (18:30 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2018 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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