Saturday, March 17, 2018

Tell Starbucks: Fish can't eat plastic (signatures needed)

Tell Starbucks: Break free from plastic

The petition to Starbucks CEO Kevin Johnson reads:
"Global plastic pollution levels are reaching a crisis point, and Starbucks cannot claim to be a leader in sustainability unless it follows through on promises to cut plastic waste. Starbucks must meet and go beyond its 2008 commitments, including a switch to recyclable cups and a 25 percent increase in reusable cup usage."

Add your name:

Sign the petition ►

Dear Katy,

Tell Starbucks: Break free from plastic

Each minute, the equivalent of a garbage truck full of plastic ends up in the ocean – where it's eaten by fish, birds and other marine animals.1 By 2050, the world's oceans are projected to have more plastic than fish.2

Starbucks' gross overproduction of single-use plastic items is a major contributor to this global crisis. Any company that claims to care about sustainability must cut down on plastic, but despite years of promises, Starbucks has done almost nothing to reduce the toxic trash created by its cups, straws and plastic cutlery.

We need to remind Starbucks of its commitments and tell the company to stop being part of the global plastic pollution problem now.

Tell Starbucks: Don't trash our planet with plastic. Click here to sign the petition.

Starbucks has built an empire off of its signature green straws, plastic-lined cups and the global "to-go" culture. Now, the ocean is paying the price for Starbucks' corporate waste.

In 2008, Starbucks told the world it would start using a recyclable paper cup and increase reusable cup usage to 25 percent by 2015. Neither of these promises have been kept.3

Despite its big talk about sustainability, Starbucks has no plan to reduce its plastic trash and continues to use its iconic white paper cups that are nearly impossible to recycle because of their plastic lining. Every year, four billion of these Starbucks cups end up in landfills and oceans around the world.4

Starbucks cares a lot about its iconic brand, so we know massive public pressure can get the coffee giant to change. Public pressure for corporations to reduce plastic is already working. Last year, activists challenged Coca-Cola's lobbying against plastic bottle deposits and won.5 And already this year, giants like McDonalds and British coffee company Costa Coffee have made pledges to cut down on their plastic waste.6

That's why we are joining together with Stand.earth and the Break Free from Plastics Pollution coalition to tell Starbucks to do better. Together, we can make a huge difference in the amount of landfill waste and ocean pollution around the globe.

Tell Starbucks: Don't trash our planet with plastic. Click the link below to sign the petition:

https://act.credoaction.com/sign/starbucks-plastic?t=7&akid=27694%2E12967895%2ExYBoUp

Thanks for fighting back,

Brandy Doyle, Campaign Manager
CREDO Action from Working Assets

Add your name:

Sign the petition ►

References:

  1. Rebecca Harrington, "By 2050, the oceans could have more plastic than fish," Business Insider, Jan. 26, 2017.
  2. Ibid.
  3. Davis Harper, "Starbucks Falls Short on Environmental Commitments," Sierra Club, Nov. 21, 2017.
  4. Katherine Martinko, "Starbucks cups are not recyclable, which means 4 billion go to landfill each year," Treehugger, June 16, 2017.
  5. Ayesha Javed, "Coca-Cola aims to collect and recycle all packaging by 2030," Telegraph, Jan. 19, 2018.
  6. Ibid.

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