Coca-Cola products will be responsible for up to 1.33 billion pounds of plastic waste making its way into the planet’s oceans and waterways each year by 2030 — enough to fill the stomachs of more than 18 million blue whales, according to a new report by nonprofit Oceana.
Coca-Cola’s World With Waste projects that the company’s plastic use will be more than 9.1 billion pounds annually by 2030 if its practices do not change. That would be an almost 40 percent increase over Coca-Cola’s reported 2023 plastic use, which was enough to go around the world over 100 times, a press release from Oceana said.
“Coca-Cola’s future is currently tied, like an albatross around its neck, to single-use plastic,” said Matt Littlejohn, senior vice president at Oceana. “Single-use plastic is bad for the oceans, human health, and business. Recycling can’t solve the company’s out-of-control plastic problem. Reuse can.”
The report found that if Coca-Cola reached 26.4 percent reusable packaging — an increase of 16.2 percent from 2023 numbers — it could “bend its plastic curve.”
Reusable plastic bottles can be used as many as 25 times, while reusable glass bottles can be used up to 50 times, avoiding the production of as many as 49 additional single-use bottles.
A study published last year in the journal Science Advances found Coca-Cola to be the biggest producer of branded plastic waste found in the environment.
“Unfortunately, the Coca-Cola Company communicated in December 2024 that it had discarded its goal to increase reusable packaging to 25% of the company’s sales,” Oceana said.
The company announced that, instead of its previous goal, it will focus on ramping up its recycled content, as well as on collecting its single-use plastic bottles to be recycled.
However, as the Oceana report details, selling single-use plastic packaging with recycled content and the collection of plastic for recycling will not lower Coca-Cola’s overall plastic footprint.
“Single-use plastic bottles made with recycled content can — just like bottles made of virgin plastic — still become marine pollution and harm ocean life,” Littlejohn said.
Coca-Cola currently operates refillable systems in some countries, including Nigeria, Brazil, Germany and some areas of the United States, like southern Texas, reported The Guardian.
“They have the largest reusable infrastructure of any beverage company and they have the ability to grow that and show the way for the rest of the industry,” Littlejohn said, as The Guardian reported.
The multi-billion-dollar company could face more criticism due to mounting public concern regarding plastic’s impact on human health, the press release said. Studies have increasingly connected the chemicals used in the manufacturing of plastics with health problems such as heart disease, cancer, diabetes, autism and infertility.
If Coca-Cola won’t address its global plastic problem, Oceana recommended policymakers consider taking steps to make sure the company’s plastic footprint is reduced.
“The Coca-Cola Company’s plastic use and status as one of the most famous plastic polluters in the world is a liability for the future of the company, the oceans, and the planet. Coca-Cola needs to take real action to address its plastic problem now instead of focusing on measures that don’t meaningfully reduce its single-use plastic footprint,” Littlejohn added.
The post Coca-Cola’s Plastic Waste Polluting Oceans Projected to Reach 1.3 Billion Pounds per Year by 2030: Oceana Report appeared first on EcoWatch.
https://www.ecowatch.com/coca-cola-plastic-waste-oceans.html
Green Living
Best of Sustainability In Your Ear: Okhtapus Cofounder Stewart Sarkozy-Banoczy Accelerates Ocean Solutions
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Editor’s Note: This episode originally aired on December 22, 2025.
The post Best of Sustainability In Your Ear: Okhtapus Cofounder Stewart Sarkozy-Banoczy Accelerates Ocean Solutions appeared first on Earth911.
https://earth911.com/podcast/sustainability-in-your-ear-okhtapus-cofounder-stewart-sarkozy-banoczy-accelerates-ocean-solutions/
Green Living
Earth911 Inspiration: A Serious Look at Modern Lifestyle
Today’s quote comes from Pope John Paul II’s message for the celebration of the World Day of Peace, 1990. He wrote, “Modern society will find no solution to the ecological problem unless it takes a serious look at its lifestyle.”
Earth911 inspirations. Post them, share your desire to help people think of the planet first, every day.
The post Earth911 Inspiration: A Serious Look at Modern Lifestyle appeared first on Earth911.
https://earth911.com/inspire/earth911-inspiration-take-serious-look-lifestyle/
Green Living
Best of Sustainability In Your Ear: Making Billions of Square Feet of Commercial Space Sustainable with CBRE’s Rob Bernard
The built environment, particularly office buildings other urban facilities, are responsible for 39% of the global energy-related emissions, according to the World Green Building Council. About a third of that impact comes from the initial construction of a building and the other two-thirds is produced over the lifetime of a building by heating, cooling, and providing power to the occupants. Our guest today is leading a key battle to reduce the impact of the built environment. Tune in for a wide-ranging conversation with Rob Bernard, Chief Sustainability Officer at CBRE Group Inc., which manages more than $145 billion of commercial buildings, providing logistics, retail, and corporate office services across more than than 100 countries.

Rob cut his sustainability teeth at Microsoft, as its Chief Environmental Strategist for 11 years, as the company was developing its world-leading approach and collaborating with other tech giants to lobby for policy and funding to accelerate progress. He discusses CBRE’s Sustainability Solutions & Services for commercial building owners, as well as the accelerating progress for renewables, carbon tracking, and economic, health, and lifestyle benefits of living lightly on the planet. You can learn more about CBRE and its sustainability services at cbre.com
Take a few minutes to learn more about making construction and building operations more sustainable:
- Earth911 Podcast: Cityzenith’s Michael Jansen Uses Digital Twins to Reinvent Urban Planning
- Earth911 Podcast: Concrete.ai CEO Alex Hall On Mixing Embodied Carbon Out Of the Built Environment
- Best of Earth911 Podcast: Lowering Construction Impacts With Green Badger’s Tommy Linstroth
- Best of Earth911 Podcast: William Ulrich on Learning From Y2K To Design the Circular Economy
- Best of Earth911 Podcast: Autodesk Spacemaker Aides Building Efficiency With AI Insights
- How to Assess Your Business’ Environmental and Social Impacts
- Passive House Design: Changing the Future of New Home Construction
- Subscribe to Sustainability in Your Ear on iTunes and Apple Podcasts.
- Follow Sustainability in Your Ear on Spreaker, iHeartRadio, or YouTube.
Editor’s Note: This podcast originally aired on April 15, 2024.
The post Best of Sustainability In Your Ear: Making Billions of Square Feet of Commercial Space Sustainable with CBRE’s Rob Bernard appeared first on Earth911.
https://earth911.com/podcast/earth911-podcast-making-billions-of-square-feet-of-commercial-space-sustainable-with-cbres-rob-bernard/
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