Dune ives seattle




















Now comes the test of the North American audience, who will have the option to go to the theater or watch it on HBO Max. Hanging on the line is the sequel — or, more accurately, the conclusion to the first film.

Rather, we focus on discussions related to local stories by our own staff. You can read more about our community policies here. However, those still generate waste; plus, not all paper straws are created equal. For all businesses, the Lonely Whale Foundation champions an on-demand policy, wherein stores provide straws to customers only in the event that they request them. When establishments do so, Ives says, straw usage decreases by a cost-cutting 50 to 90 percent. The campaign is no simple endeavor.

Lonely Whale also worked with Seattle port commissioner Fred Felleman to get airport concessionaires to adopt either a marine-friendly alternative straw, or an on-demand policy. We look at it every day in Seattle.

In the coming year, Strawless is looking to expand to 10 more cities. Unlike Seattle, some cities listed on the ballot are nowhere near an ocean. Let them know that they can contact the Lonely Whale Foundation for free samples of straw alternatives.

Who knows? Adrian Grenier could end up throwing a pitch—or taking a strawless sip—in your hometown. Something went wrong. Waste : Do you think there will ever be a time when recycled plastic makes more economic sense than virgin plastic? What we discovered is that, globally, we use billion single-use plastic bottles annually; about 30 percent get recycled.

And the growth needs of the plastic water bottle industry are significant. People use a lot of single-use plastic water bottles, but they also use reusables. Listen to the full interview with Ives below and more episodes here.

Read transcript here. Home Resources NothingWasted! Waste NothingWasted!



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