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Getting It To Go

The massive footprint of take-out food

Who doesn't want to avoid cooking once in a while? Stopping at the corner deli during lunch, or reaching for the phone after work may seem like an easy way to avoid ending up to your elbows in dirty dishes, but the containers that food comes in can't be washed and put back on your shelf like your pots and pans can.

All of that plastic and Styrofoam adds up quickly, and containers and packaging make up more than 30 percent of all trash thrown in landfills, according to the most recent EPA Municipal Solid Waste data. And, although many cities are passing laws that require restaurants to discontinue use of Styrofoam products, one of the biggest landfill offenders, a large majority of businesses have not stopped yet.

So, what to do about all of this waste? The best thing we can do is take matters into our own hands and develop creative ways to reduce our use of take out containers. Brewing coffee at home and pouring it into in a stainless steel mug is a great way to eliminate all of those to-go cups. Another good tip is to plan ahead and grocery shop only once or twice a week, using canvas or other earth-friendly bags when you do so. If you prepare your lunch at home and bring it to work in glass tupperware and eat it using real utensils brought from home, you'll find your trashcan to be a lot more empty at the end of the day. And your eco-conscious behavior may influence others to do the same!

To track how your take out choices affect the planet, the Global Footprint Network has a Personal Footprint calculator that is a fun and interactive way to measure your ecological footprint and find out your biggest areas of resource consumption. The calculator expresses the amount of resources an individual uses in the number of planets it takes to support your lifestyle.

In order to make a dent in our footprint in the long-run, we definitely need to start thinking “outside of the take-out box.”

Source: BecauseAction.com

COMMENT ON ARTICLE
by T.K
My grandmother had a large attic and used empty egg cartons to insulate the walls to try to keep it warmer in the winter months.
by linda kelly
Maybe the government could require all packaging to be made of recycled materials, all businesses to recycle their waste, and all landfill sites should also recycle EVERYTHING, not just bury it, ya think???
by wildthreads
Thanks p allen! I will get that tupperware container and use it. I DO NOT mind asking for this kind of service and refusing to come back if they don't allow it.
by wildthreads
Is there anything we can do IF we bring food home from a resturant? Will they take aluminum foil, a plate from home?
by Linda
How about petitioning the government to require all take out packaging to be made from recycled materials, trash cans to be as easy to access as the drive up window, and to recycle all their waste? Or pressuring the food chains directly with protests, pickett lines and boycotts? This problem is HUGE and should not even exist! Asking consumers to carry lunch from home is working backwards, as only a few will actually remember to do it. The corporations can make a huge difference more easily..
by stefan mattlage
You say in the article that we all do it- Take out food. This is simply not true. For tears many of us have totally rejected take out food. Those who do take out food are in the thrall of the advertisers. Simply planning ahead will make this behavior go away. That is what adults are supposed to do. I am sick and tired of all the excuses and cover that are given to protect bad behavior. Grow Up America
by Doreen
One of the biggest concerns I have is the thoughtless (without thought) and careless way we humans go about drinking bottled water. I am an electrician who has worked in a h2o bottling plant and I can assure you this water is no more purified as that which you can achieve at home with a water purifier. People don't seem to get that though and they purchase case after case of convenient bottles of water that turn up everywhere from our highways to our backyards to our pristine waterways when the wind blows. We need to STOP THE MADNESS! Please people~kick your bottles to the curb and carry your own water from your own home.
by Donna
We take leftovers to work (in tupperware divided plates) for our lunch for several reasons: 1) It takes the same amount of energy to cook double amounts for supper to give us our next day's lunch; 2) with the downturn in the economy it is much cheaper than buying take-out; 3) usually our meals are much more healthy than what fast food offers; 4) we are not adding to the landfill with all those containers/bags, etc. It does take a little more effort, but it makes us feel good when we carry our lunch.
by p allen
I sell Tupperware, and we have a product called a "flat out", a collapsable container that fits right in your purse or brief case. This can be used for taking home leftovers, without the mess of leaky styrofoam containers. After my family got over the embarassment of me whipping out my Tupperware in restaurants, they were on board. It's just like the grocery store, you just have to remember to bring it with you.
by Valbona Bushi
There needs to be more push on restaurants and other food businesses to offer incentives for people to bring their own, just as grocery stores offer a small discount if you use your own bags. This should be even bigger for carry out places
by Sherrie Vitello*
First of all "We the people" need to realize just how vital it is to our planet to come up with a way to STOP using harmful styrofoam & plastics. We can't burn it, due to harmful fumes(God help our Ozone). No....we need to utlize it in someway that would be a good thing. What about using all this plastic & styrofoam as some sort of building material? I mean it'll last forever...right? What if we could use it to build things that are useful for us humans...? Maybe instead of burning plastics & styrofoam we could find a way to neutralize it so it wouldn't have any harmful fumes. All I know is if we don't come up with something we will cause alot more damage to our precious earth than we know. There should be NO PRICE on what this would cost....we're talking about survival! Sometimes just because something may be more convenient for us doesn't mean it's good for us.....or our planet. All you geniuses out there...come on...put your thinking caps on & lets solve this!!

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