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 »  Home  »  Blogs  »  Bagged milk
Bagged milk
By Green Living Tips | Published  02/21/2008

My earliest memories of milk packaging are of glass bottles, followed by cardboard cartons which then evolved (or devolved) into plastic bottles.

According to this article on The Guardian, in Britain alone, over 27 million gallons of milk is consumed a week, of which at least two-thirds is sold in plastic bottles - but only one in four plastic bottles is recycled.

That's just one country, and one week - imagine the global production of plastic milk bottles.

The clever Canadians though have been using less plastic for milk packaging for some time now by buying their milk in pouches/bags and the UK appears set to follow suit. Before you start thinking about all that crying over spilled milk, here's how the system works


From South Caernarfon Creameries
(totally degradable 2 pint bags)

I admit it was a bit of a "doh!" moment when I saw those pics - I really envisioned milk pouches as being incredibly messy.

It's estimated that if plastic milk bottles in the UK were replaced with plastic milk bags, 100,000 tonnes of plastic would be kept out of landfills. Using degradable plastics helps lessen the impact even further.

As odd as the milk bag may seem to most of us; some Canadians find the idea of milk in bottles equally strange - it's just what you get used to I guess.

By the way, if you ever get the opportunity - the best packaging I ever came across for milk was a cow. There is nothing like milk straight from the source; try it out at least once in your life. I spent a little bit of time on dairy farms and the memory of the smell of all the fresh milk in the large dairy vats and a jug of the creamy stuff on the farm's breakfast table causes my eyes to mist up every time.




Michael Bloch
Green Living Tips.com
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  • Comment #1 (Posted by N. & J.)

    My fiance and I are trying to reduce our impact and were able to find milk in glass jars in a local grocery stores but after researching online we found a local dairy with a "cow share" program. Basically for a monthly fee we get raw milk delivered once a week. The milk is great and since it comes with the cream still on top we are able to make our own butter and buttermilk using our kitchenaid. The price is a lot steeper then the cost of buying milk in a plastic jug shipped who knows how many miles but we figure it's worth the cost to know where our milk is coming from and who is caring for the cows. We took a tour of the dairy before we decided to invest and are able to go visit whenever we choose. The milk comes in glass jars and each week when we get two "new" ones we give them our old ones to be cleaned and reused again and again.

    You can see pictures of the cows and other things that we are doing on our blog http://badhuman.wordpress.com
     
  • Comment #2 (Posted by Holly)

    As a Canadian, I grew up with milk in bags. It is not an ideal system, but, as noted, is better than plastic jugs.

    A nice aspect of the bags is that they can be re-used. When a bag is empty, cut across the top, wash the bag with a drop of soap, hang it up to dry, and now you have a sturdy plastic bag that can be reused many times.

    We use them to store leftovers, pre-washed vegetables, baked goods, etc. We just wash or rinse them out in between uses.
     
  • Comment #3 (Posted by Michael - Green Living Tips)

    That's a great idea N & J! Holly, what you do reminds me of what my parents used to do many years ago when plastic bags were new and still a novelty - they would would be a weekly bag wash - it's a great idea :)
     
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