THE NEW YORK TIMES – When Costco tried to cut down on its plastics use earlier this year, putting its popular rotisserie chicken in a thin bag instead of a bulkier clam shell, some chicken lovers were displeased.
The bags were leaky, they said, and risked making a greasy mess. Their edges were prone to splitting open.
“Chicken juice spilled all over the trunk of our car!” one person complained on Reddit.
It was another chapter in the packaging wars.
There is broad agreement that the world needs to use less plastic. Plastic waste is filling the world’s landfills and clogging rivers and streams.
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Recycling hasn’t kept up; less than 10 percent of plastic waste gets recycled. Plastic can also contain chemicals linked to cancer and other health problems.
Costco’s rotisserie-chicken-in-a-bag was a classic example of solution that’s “less bad,” she said.
“But the funny thing about less-bad solutions is that it tends to disappoint everybody,” she said. “It’s less plastic. It’s fewer trucks on the road. But the chicken is still in a plastic bag, and there’s chicken juice all over your car.”
Take a proposed New York state law that would require companies to reduce the plastic packaging they use by 50 percent over 12 years by requiring them to either find more sustainable options or pay a fee.
Opponents of the law pointed out that it could mean the demise of another American institution: sliced cheese.
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The plastic-to-cheese ratio in packs of individually wrapped cheese slices meant they’d be a prime target, should the law pass, they said …