Urge Coca-Cola to Bring Back Refill

James Quincey, President & COO; Beatriz Perez, SVP and Chief Communications, Sustainability & Strategic Partnerships Officer; Jennifer Mann, Senior Vice President & President of North America; Ben Jordan, Global Lead for Sustainability & Packaging

Urge Coca-Cola to Bring Back Refill
Urge Coca-Cola to Bring Back Refill

The Coca-Cola Company is the largest consumer-facing global seller of plastics, producing 134 billion – almost one quarter (23%) – of the world’s PET plastic bottles. Its “Every Bottle Back” pledge stands in stark contrast to the company’s #1 ranking for five years running in #BreakFreeFromPlastic’s brand audits of plastic pollution.

In fact, Coca-Cola itself was an early leader in refillables. During the company’s early years, it pioneered a waste-free system for fountain drinks and created a successful deposit return system that ensured an impressive 96% of its glass bottles were reused.

But between the 1950s and 1970s, the company gutted its own refillable infrastructure in the US, opting for single-use containers that externalized the cost of its new packaging waste onto the public and ratepayers. Story of Stuff Project’s new report reveals that Coke knew at the start of the 1970s that switching to single-use containers would be worse for the environment but doubled down regardless. Then the company set about battling federal and state legislative efforts to hold the beverage industry accountable for the lifecycle costs of its packaging through bottle bills and bans on single-use containers.

In 2022, Coca-Cola announced its intent to sell 25% of its beverages globally in refillable containers. But there’s a glaring hole in its flagship market, the US, where the company has virtually no refillables in circulation apart from one small pilot project in Texas. We’re calling on Coca-Cola and its bottlers to change the course of history and lead the beverage industry once again by bringing back refillable bottles and supporting state-mandated refill quotas.

To: James Quincey, President & COO; Beatriz Perez, SVP and Chief Communications, Sustainability & Strategic Partnerships Officer; Jennifer Mann, Senior Vice President & President of North America; Ben Jordan, Global Lead for Sustainability & Packaging
From: [Your Name]

In 2022 Coca-Cola announced a pledge to sell 25% of its product in refillable packaging globally. But aside from a small refillables pilot in El Paso, Texas, you have not signaled any intention to bring back the refillable bottle in the US – your flagship market – despite the potential of refillables to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, plastic pollution and harm to fenceline communities. Nowhere is the shift away from single-use packaging more important than in the US, which produces more wasted plastic bottles per capita than any other country in the world.

Despite your “Every Bottle Back” campaign slogan, your results on the ground paint a very different picture. For five years running, Coca-Cola has held the dubious distinction of being the world’s #1 plastic polluter in #BreakFreeFromPlastic’s annual global Brand Audit. Your plastic packaging pollutes the environment on every continent.

Yet a century ago, your company pioneered the use of the refillable bottle, collecting 96% of your bottles back for refill by using a deposit-return system. The twin crises of climate change and plastic pollution along with the devastating consequences of plastic on fenceline communities such as those living in what’s now dubbed “Cancer Alley” demand solutions commensurate with the problem.

We are calling on the Coca-Cola Company to embrace its capacity for industry leadership on this issue by:

1) Bringing back Coca-Cola’s refillable glass bottle and extending your 25% refill commitment to the US market.

2) Pledging support for high-performing deposit return systems, known as ‘bottle bills’ that include refillables requirements.

In taking these steps, you can become a leading company on reuse in the US and make a significant contribution to scaling true solutions on behalf of the entire beverage sector.