In short:

Farmers on Western Australia’s south coast are challenging the norm by selling blueberries in cardboard punnets instead of plastic.

A similar concept has been trialled successfully across more than 30 stores in northern New South Wales.

What’s next?

Most blueberries are still sold in plastic punnets, but the industry is trialling solutions.

  • ddh@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 day ago

    The amount of hours I’ve spent looking for non-plastic options for regular items is so stupid. I’m glad to have non-plastic options, so I can vote with my wallet.

    • WhatAmLemmy@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I will never forgive the government for not requiring biodegradable packaging, and taxing every corporation for every disposable piece of plastic.

      They target everything that inconveniences consumers (straws, plastic bags, etc), while patting themselves on the back, twiddling their thumbs, and virtue signalling to constituents… while 99% of plastic waste is from grocery packaging, shipping packaging, etc… They target the people while letting corporations profit from 1000x the damage.

  • NathA
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    1 day ago

    Can confirm that I bought blueberries in Denmark (WA town) last month in a cardboard punnet. I thought it was just what the local farm that sold to the IGA did. I’m glad to hear it’s more widespread and potentially rolling out to everyone.

    • Albbi@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      It’s so disheartening seeing how much plastic comes home from the grocery store.