Starbucks has a new, more expensive experimental tool, but it’s worth it

New York (CNN Business) – Starbucks has an experimental program for the “pedir prestado una taza” in select locations of its city of origin, Seattle.

The program is part of Starbucks’ objective to make sure that your vases are more sustainable and will start as a test of two months in Seattle’s ten tenths. The clients of these services have the option to receive their prayers at a time when they can be used.

Function of the following manner: the customers borrow their prayers in a reusable vase and pay a refundable deposit of one dollar. When the customer finishes with their baby, they pay the rate and receive a dollar credit as a rebate of 10 more bonus points for their Starbucks compensation account.

Starbucks taza

If customers bring the vase to the house, they can also approve the Starbucks association with Ridwell, a company that will collect the reusable vases in their house. Luego, each can be disinfected and disinfected and rotated in order to use another client.

This effort is just one of the many intentions of the eco-friendly coffee shop chain with its prices, which will help the company’s compromise to reduce its sales by 50% by 2030. For example, Starbucks recently redesigned its tapas of free holidays for the need of a pope or pajilla.

The traditional disposable paper vases of the chain are made of plastic and paper, for which it is difficult to recycle. Although the compostable vases can be a more ecological option, it must be composted in an industrial installation. Therefore, the reusable vases can be a more practical and ecological option, although this can be difficult to extend.

Starbucks has launched a trial of reusable vases at Gatwick’s London airport in 2019, one year after the company launched the NextGen Cup Challenge in collaboration with McDonald’s in other societies to review the materials of the vases. The contestants, from the aficionados, have industrial design firms, presenting proposals for hongos’ hay bales, arrowheads, shrubs, maize hats and artificial lumber.

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