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I'm a genie in a bottle, you gotta' rub me the right way?!.....Coca Cola launching new plastic bottle size......
#1
......13.2 oz.....for $1.59........also made of 100% recyclable materials....starting this month......


Coke is launching a new bottle size for the first time in a decade

.....Coca-Cola is launching a new bottle size for the first time in a decade, but it's what the bottle's made of that marks an even more notable first: 100% recycled plastic material.

The new 13.2-ounce recyclable bottle that some customers will see on shelves this week is made entirely of other plastics, and it's the latest move in Coca-Cola's several-year initiative to reduce its plastic waste. Coke is also hoping the size attracts younger, under-25 drinkers who are seeking sustainable packaging (and sometimes even shunning the company).

The new bottle will be available starting this month in select states across the Northeast, including New York and Connecticut, as well as in California and Florida, before launching nationwide this summer. Coke describes the size as a "more sippable package," and it will debut with the company's most popular sodas like Coca-Cola, Diet Coke and Coke Zero Sugar at a suggested retail price of $1.59.

"We've been listening to consumers and they have been telling us they want something a little smaller and a little more easy to consume," Alpa Sutaria, Coca-Cola's general manager of sustainability, told CNN Business. "We took this opportunity to make a bottle with plastic that's 100% recyclable."

The 13.2-ounce size is slightly larger than its aluminum can option and smaller than the typical 20-ounce bottle. Unique sizes like the 7.5-ounce mini can have garnered strong sales.

Meanwhile, the recycled plastic material will also be featured in 20-ounce bottles of Coke and Diet Coke in New York, California and Texas this month, as well as for the company's Dasani and Smartwater brands in certain locations in the coming months.

Sutaria said developing the new packaging has been a "labor of love and great innovation" for Coca-Cola. The recycled plastic is cleaned, ground down and turned into grain-like flakes before being transformed into a new bottle.

She added that launch states were chosen because customers in those areas "are more sensitive to the challenges we have around sustainability issues."

Coca-Cola (KO) is often criticized for contributing to environmentally damaging plastic waste. Last year, the company was named as the world's No. 1 plastic polluter by the environmental firm Break Free From Plastic. Its logos and branding were found on 13,834 pieces of plastic in 51 countries, often discarded in public spaces like parks and beaches.

In 2018, Coke announced its "World Without Waste" initiative with the ultimate goal of, by 2030, collecting and recycling one bottle or can for each one it sells. The new bottle, according to Sutaria, is a "big step in that direction."

"We're determined to innovate and to develop technology to minimize our impact," she said, adding the company is "following through our commitment with real action."

Coca-Cola isn't the only multinational conglomerate aiming to reduce its plastic pollution. Nestlé, the world's biggest food company, announced last year it's spending $2 billion on similar initiatives. Pepsi recently rolled out a redesigned 2-liter bottle that uses 24% less material.



size.......does.......matter......?!
_____________________________________
I reject your reality and substitute my own!
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#2
That sounds expensive, but then it's been a while since I purchased soda. I presume that it's no longer $0.88 for a 2 liter bottle?
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#3
now if they'd make Coke a better product.

*cough* carbonated corn syrup water *cough*
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#4
Why 13.2?
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#5
mattkime wrote:
Why 13.2?

Who knows? Could be having it be 10% more than a 12 oz can, ~1/5 of a 2 l bottle, and so on. That amount plus ice is about right for filling a 16 oz glass.
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#6
mattkime wrote:
Why 13.2?

10% more than a 12oz can?
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#7
Glad to hear about the plan to actually design the bottle around recycling.
I've been trying to make most of our purchases from aluminum and glass containers.

Steve
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#8
mattkime wrote:
Why 13.2?

Because that's 390 ml and that.... um.... Yeah, I don't know either...
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#9
The current size of their 6 pack bottles is 16.9 ounces. How do I know? My wife buys a veritable crapload of Diet Coke. She goes through at least a 2 liter bottle, plus a few half liter bottles every day. So they're probably going to price the new 13.2 ounce bottle the same as the half liter bottles and hope nobody notices.
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#10
It could also be based on economies of scale related to packaging materials and delivery, or daily caloric intake recommendation labeling. I wonder if they will be compatible with existing vending machinery.
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