Johannesburg (AFP) – Coca-Cola produces 120 billion throwaway plastic bottles a year, Greenpeace Africa said at a protest in South Africa Thursday, urging the soda maker to use glass and tin packaging to cut back on plastic pollution.

Activists erected a giant bottle cap outside the company’s Johannesburg office emblazoned with the slogan “Cap it Coke” in a demonstration held on World Environment Day.

Coca-Cola has been the world’s top plastic polluter for six consecutive years, the environmental activist group claimed.

“Coca-Cola produces 120 billion throwaway plastics every year. And most of it will end up in the environment and in the marine ecosystem,” Greenpeace representative Hellen Kahaso Dena told AFP.

“So today, we are outside the office telling them to cut plastic production, invest in refill and reuse, and ensure that they are investing in other sustainable forms of packaging such as glass and cans,” she said.

The company’s claims to be promoting plastics recycling amounted to “greenwashing”, she claimed. “We know that only about nine percent gets recycled. Most of the plastic will end up in the environment,” Dena said.

The group also urged Coca-Cola to stand behind a push for a Global Plastic Treaty that will prioritise a cap on plastic production.

Negotiations among delegates from nearly 200 nations for the world’s first accord on cutting plastics pollution ended without agreement in South Korea last year after opposition from a bloc of mainly oil-producing countries.

A new round is due in Geneva in August.

Since the failure of the talks, Coca-Cola lowered its environmental commitments by effectively scrapping a pledge to reach 25 percent reusable packaging by 2030, and pushing back dates and amounts for recycling goals.

Over 99 percent of plastics derive from fossil fuels, directly linking plastic production to the climate crisis, Greenpeace said.

  • WolfmanEightySix@piefed.social
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    3
    arrow-down
    2
    ·
    edit-2
    1 day ago

    If capitalism were as innovative as they make out, we’d have moved on from non-biodegradable plastic by now, I’m sure.

    Edit; completely messed up the comment, I’ve changed it to what I meant.

    • ikt@aussie.zone
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      edit-2
      7 hours ago

      If capitalism were as innovative as they make out

      Why does this rub me up the wrong way? We literally live in an age of miracles, I have unlimited visual and audio based entertainment on Youtube, I have access to all of mankinds music on Spotify, the phone in your pocket is a trillion times more powerful than we used to send man to the moon, I am typing a message that will be read by multiple people on the other side of the world instantly, this used to take months and was written with pen and paper and before that it just didn’t happen, you would only communicate with the people within your village, work on a farm, and then die. In 2025 communist North Korea this is pretty much still the case.

      The screen you’re looking at is most likely LED, which itself is a miracle

      This man changed your life https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shuji_Nakamura

      How Blue LEDs Changed the World

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=idwKHQEw78g

      There are thousands of these in your life which you interact with daily and won’t even realise

      Plastic is a miracle, it has nearly infinite uses and capabilities, it is used nearly everywhere because it is so good, if it was an individual product it would be one of the best selling items of all time.

      We’re working on biodegradable plastic and other replacements, sooner or later we’ll get there

      Still true today: Louis CK Everything is amazing & Nobody is happy

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PdFB7q89_3U