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The product features 9 to 12 whole-food ingredients, including sustainably caught and naturally low-mercury skipjack tuna, and come in 100% recyclable, plastic-free bowls.
The Subway restaurant chain has announced that its salad bowls and lids are now made from 95 percent post-consumer recycled (PCR) materials; predominately from plastic soda and water bottles.
Sprite is trading in its iconic green plastic bottle for a new clear one that is more recyclable. On Wednesday, the Coca-Cola Company released a statement announcing that, starting Aug. 1, the ...
Instead of the recyclable, compostable and biodegradable plastic-free hexagonal bowls, customers of the salad chain have shown on TikTok how their $15 Harvest Bowls and Chicken Pesto Parm orders ...
First, to make the Subway salad bowl as green as possible, the materials were changed from rarely recycled OPS to PETE, the number-one most recycled plastic. The PETE used in the Subway bowl isn’t ...
Sprite is ditching its iconic green plastic bottle in favor of more sustainable clear bottles, its parent company, The Coca-Cola Company, announced Wednesday.
Coca-Cola said Sprite's green polyethylene terephthalate (PET) plastic bottles can be recyclable, but noted that the added color limits its ability to be reused.
American cities want to recycle their plastic trash in Mexico. Critics call it ‘waste colonialism.’ A new recycling plant in Mexicali raises legal and ethical concerns.
The announcement comes as the chain prepares to remove single use plastic from its salads bowls as of next week, serving them instead in cardboard containers which are 50 per cent recycled.
The tuna featured in each bowl is 100% sustainably pole & line caught and the bowls come in 100% recyclable, plastic-free packaging. Varieties include tuna pasta salad, tuna white bean salad, and ...