Close X
Wednesday, January 8, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

In Battle For Booming Us Coffee Pod Market, It's Giant Keurig Vs. The Recyclables

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Mar, 2015 03:05 PM
    LINCOLN, Calif. — One measure of how heated the environmental battle has become over coffee giant Keurig Green Mountain's $5 billion-a-year plastic pods is how often the company's opponents use galactic comparisons.
     
    Keurig, the single-serve coffee industry's leader, produced enough plastic coffee pods last year to circle the earth more than 10 times, according to one analyst's estimate, often cited by Keurig's critics. A YouTube parody depicts aliens that look like Keurig's plastic pods invading Earth.
     
    The company introduced a new coffeemaker in time for Christmas that allowed only its pods, and the battle heated up again. It spawned parodies featuring Star Wars-style rebels challenging the "Keurig Empire" by hacking a machine to accept more environmentally friendly pods made by rivals.
     
    More than a dozen coffee manufacturers and other businesses are suing over what they claim is Keurig's unfair efforts to shut out rival pods.
     
    "We're under siege," said Jon Rogers, patriarch of a California-based family coffee company whose soy and corn byproduct-based pods are among those that the new Keurig machine is engineered to reject. "It's a matter of life and death for me."
     
    Keurig says the fight boils down to how to make the best cup of coffee, and the company has pledged to come up with a fully recyclable pod of its own by 2020. The throw-away containers, both by Keurig and its competitors, allow coffee drinkers to get a quick cup without messy grounds.
     
    One reason Keurig is locked into plastic right now is that nothing else seems to keep the coffee inside the pods fresh like it does, said Monique Oxender, the company's chief sustainability officer. Keurig is seeking more environmentally friendly materials, she said.
     
    "We have to do that while protecting the quality of the coffee," she said.
     
    If this sounds like a tempest in a coffee cup, it might be that you haven't yet gotten a single-serve coffee-brewer for Christmas, which analysts says is how half the users get their start.
     
    Keurig's product is reshaping the $40 billion U.S. coffee industry. Its annual report said it accounted for 30 per cent of retail coffee sales last year. More than one in five U.S. households had one of Keurig's single-serve coffee makers.
     
    "In their current form, they're an environmental disaster," said Kevin Knox, a coffee-industry veteran and analyst who publishes and blogs on coffee and the global coffee trade.
     
    The controversy heated up when the company introduced its Keurig 2.0 last Christmas. Consumers complained about having to use only Keurig-affiliated brands, and environmentalists fumed about the steady stream of plastic pods to U.S. landfills.
     
    And analysts say holiday sales were disappointing.
     
    Coffee industry experts say Keurig also has stuck with plastic so far because it helps contain the carbon dioxide that roasted beans put off — early K-Cup prototypes had a problem with pods popping open.
     
    Makers of biodegradable and recyclable single-serve pods can deal with both problems by finely timing distribution to retailers, so the pods don't sit around too long on store shelves, said Knox, the coffee blogger.
     
    Rogers, whose adult children help him run Rogers Family Coffee in Lincoln, California, a half-hour from Sacramento, isn't waiting for the lawsuits against Keurig to work their way through courts.
     
    His family recently produced a small black gizmo it calls the "Freedom Clip," which they say lets consumers rig a Keurig 2.0 coffee machine so it accepts rival brands.
     
    Rogers mails them for free to any consumer who asks. Rogers also is about to start distribution of biodegradable coffee pods marked with special ink that he says will fool the lock-out mechanism on the Keurig 2.0.
     
    Ultimately, Knox said, the boom of coffee-pod sales shows how intimidated Americans have become by the long-running gourmet coffee trend — fearing to home-brew java, and feeling coffee-brewing is an art best left to Keurig, Starbucks and other professionals.
     
    If it's really environmentally friendly coffee you want, Knox said, the argument runs the other way entirely. Instant coffee, he noted, ships easily as a lightweight powder, with minimal packaging, and a recyclable glass jar.
     
    "One good size jar of instant coffee makes hundreds of cups."

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Sleeping with more women reduces prostate cancer risk: Study

    Sleeping with more women reduces prostate cancer risk: Study
    As compared to men who have had only one partner during their lifetime, having sex with more than 20 women is associated with a 28...

    Sleeping with more women reduces prostate cancer risk: Study

    Errors sharpen memory while learning

    Errors sharpen memory while learning
    Committing mistakes while learning can benefit the memory and lead one to come up with the correct answer, but only if the guess is a near miss, a research revealed....

    Errors sharpen memory while learning

    Simple walk can reveal your mood

    Simple walk can reveal your mood
    Not just our mood affects how we walk, our walk can also disclose whether a person is happy or sad, reveals fascinating research....

    Simple walk can reveal your mood

    Google Exec's Supersonic Freefall From Near-space Sets Skydiving Records, Breaks Sound Barrier

    Google Exec's Supersonic Freefall From Near-space Sets Skydiving Records, Breaks Sound Barrier
    ROSWELL, N.M. - Google executive Alan Eustace broke the sound barrier and set several skydiving records over the southern New Mexico desert early Friday after taking a big leap from the edge of space.

    Google Exec's Supersonic Freefall From Near-space Sets Skydiving Records, Breaks Sound Barrier

    Stephen Hawking joins Facebook, wants people to be 'curious'

    Stephen Hawking joins Facebook, wants people to be 'curious'
    The famous theoretical physicist professor Stephen Hawking is now on Facebook, asking fans to be "curious".

    Stephen Hawking joins Facebook, wants people to be 'curious'

    America Reject Cappuccino-flavoured Potato Chips, Greenlights Wasabi Ginger

    America Reject Cappuccino-flavoured Potato Chips, Greenlights Wasabi Ginger
    Frito-Lay says Wasabi Ginger won its contest that gives people a chance to create a new flavour, beating out the coffee-flavoured chips and the two other finalists — Mango Salsa and Cheddar Bacon Mac & Cheese. 

    America Reject Cappuccino-flavoured Potato Chips, Greenlights Wasabi Ginger