How Bricks Made From Milk Cartons Can Help Typhoon Victims | World Wide Waste | Insider Business

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  • Опубликовано: 18 июн 2024
  • One of the world's largest carton manufacturers is trying to reclaim some of the 192 billion containers it makes every year. It's working with Thai schoolchildren to turn milk cartons into bricks and roofing sheets that can benefit victims of natural disasters.
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    How Bricks Made From Milk Cartons Can Help Typhoon Victims | World Wide Waste | Insider Business

Комментарии • 564

  • @BusinessInsider
    @BusinessInsider  Год назад +3

    We want your help expanding Insider's videos about the environment, climate change, and sustainability. Tell us your thoughts in this 2-3 minute survey: bit.ly/InsiderWWWsurvey 


    Thanks so much!

  • @brandonmaxfield1052
    @brandonmaxfield1052 Год назад +226

    I really like the idea for roofing sheets but the bricks raise some concern when I saw floating in water I immediately imagined a flood completing wiping out a brick road made with those bricks and housing structures might face similar issues, I can see the bricks used to make shelving units for storage though

    • @DeeP_BosE
      @DeeP_BosE Год назад +30

      This is just eye wash, bcz u cant see micro-plastic floating around when u walk on plastic bricks.

    • @RandomFandom1
      @RandomFandom1 Год назад

      You won't find many smart Asians, the smart ones are in America. Everything else is copy cat hackery

    • @modestoca25
      @modestoca25 Год назад +5

      @@DeeP_BosE eye wash??

    • @Altreux
      @Altreux Год назад +13

      Because its not a good idea, you want a house that could shelter you, and not a house that can turn into a raft when theres a flood

    • @skynotaname2229
      @skynotaname2229 Год назад +9

      If you've thought of it, they probably did to.

  • @me_ca136
    @me_ca136 Год назад +97

    And again, education is one of the most important pillars of Our future!

    • @mattk8810
      @mattk8810 Год назад +2

      Too bad they didn’t learn all that shit will leach.

    • @samuraiboi2735
      @samuraiboi2735 Год назад +1

      Well depends on how the school teaches them so yeah make sure it aint made out of sand

    • @VenomStryker
      @VenomStryker Год назад

      That's why Republicans want to get rid of it. Then we can all be a bunch of uneducated MAGA morons. 🤣

    • @DeeP_BosE
      @DeeP_BosE Год назад

      PET (polyethylene terephthalate) | PETRA is from where TETRApak comes from... phthalates can leach from PET plastic 24*7 , and accelerated with every degree rise in temp. total GREENWASH for this never ending cycle

    • @tomaszszupryczynski5453
      @tomaszszupryczynski5453 Год назад

      you mean brainwashing. cos that is what modern school is. they make you dumber like tv

  • @robertrichardapril
    @robertrichardapril Год назад +486

    So this is basically a fluff piece for Tetrapack. They designed a package that is incredibly hard to recycle and do the bare minimum in order to maintain good faith with the public.
    If they want to make a difference, they have to account for the entire life cycle of all their product.
    Its insane that they make such an environmentaly hostile product, and this video calls the recycled bricks "eco" products.
    This video puts the onus of change on the individual and communities, while the root cause of the issue is the product design. Tetra pack makes a fortune with this product, while communities around the world foot the bill to recycle complex products. Oh, but it's cool cause tetra pack finances a couple recycling programs here and there.
    This video is essentially a big PR ad for tetrapack.

    • @Lord_Zed
      @Lord_Zed Год назад +36

      Glad someone said this...

    • @leuc1823
      @leuc1823 Год назад +3

      nice

    • @korwynze6288
      @korwynze6288 Год назад +10

      i completely agree that the source is super unsustainable, and that tetra-pak is essentially doing the same thing as alot of oil companies right now.
      but atleast something is being done. its far from the ideal yet, but its a step i suppose.

    • @arti3973
      @arti3973 Год назад +23

      Yes, In addition i want to see all tetrapack executives and stakeholders living in houses made from those "eco" plastic bricks and rooftops because the material seems to be miracle

    • @tuckerbugeater
      @tuckerbugeater Год назад

      communism will work better when we create more complexity

  • @ravi2047
    @ravi2047 Год назад +16

    It's great that the waste is being recycled. It's still a drop in the ocean of waste that's created. The true solution is to reduce single use items and also create a circular economy.

  • @denisalala
    @denisalala Год назад +3

    Introducing milk in schools = creating a problem and then presenting a solution for it. Great job...

  • @wingsoflotus
    @wingsoflotus Год назад +123

    The company caused the problem... it's just right that they are the ones to solve it. Government all over the world should make a mandate about such companies... and the least these companies can do is to make initiatives like this.

  • @marin4311
    @marin4311 Год назад +449

    Tetrapak is one of the main culprits and erned billions for what has become a major environmental issue, and a threat for Humanity. We should stop using these disposable poorly recyclable containers, and ask Tetrapak a fine to pay for the environmental issues they have been responsible for.

    • @tuckerbugeater
      @tuckerbugeater Год назад

      humans are a threat to the planet. we should recycle them .

    • @Narvoza
      @Narvoza Год назад +10

      Can we start a petition for people to sign? One step starts the road

    • @saurabhdome
      @saurabhdome Год назад +19

      What can they do? They can't just switch to complete paper in any way. It will lead to poor quality and less reliable product. Recycling is the only option and if they manage to get the rate of recycling to 40-50% it should make the difference.

    • @lukask.6572
      @lukask.6572 Год назад +14

      Pure plastic containers are much much more sustainable than anything in tetrapak's portfolio.

    • @DeathToMockingBirds
      @DeathToMockingBirds Год назад +19

      @@saurabhdome Refill stations, return and re-use bottles, or if they insist on recycling, a material like glass or aluminium can at least keep it's structural integrity over many cycles. This is downcycling, one more step before the landfill.

  • @4Gehe2
    @4Gehe2 Год назад +43

    Y'know... Hre in Finland we just recycle them back in to cartons. The thing with this "recycling" is that it doesn't reduce the need for virgin materials. If they had WTE plants to incinerator with scrubbers, there would be no need to landfill most things.
    This isn't a solution, it is just ensuring that no recycled material can go back in to the material stream.

    • @DeeP_BosE
      @DeeP_BosE Год назад +2

      PET (polyethylene terephthalate) | PETRA is from where TETRApak comes from... phthalates can leach from PET plastic 24*7 , and accelerated with every degree rise in temp. total GREENWASH for this never ending cycle

    • @ow2347
      @ow2347 Год назад +4

      @@DeeP_BosE Wait, "Tetra" in Tetrapak comes from the fact that the first product they released was tetrahedon-shaped..

    • @emag7837
      @emag7837 Год назад

      @@DeeP_BosE thats wrong. Tetra is the shape of a early product. Read history and stop spreading desinformation.

    • @DeeP_BosE
      @DeeP_BosE Год назад

      @@emag7837 so ? I design drugs so that Ppl live a lil longer, I'm least concerned or bothered to prove tetras history, or its naming that rhymes with anything else.
      Tetrapak does exist bcz it has petra in it... N thats an undeniable universal truth.
      Tetrapak will always look like harmless paper in ur nearest landfill but 10 yrs down the line tetrapak will still retain its BEAUTIFUL tetrahedral SHAPE , while u n ur community will have some nice dose of microplastic in ur veins. hope that helps.

  • @alimaleki217
    @alimaleki217 Год назад +192

    If they want to protect the environment they should give milk to the students in paper cups not single-use cartons.

    • @wallacechui9857
      @wallacechui9857 Год назад +31

      I agree. Waste and recycling wouldn't be an issue if there was no waste to begin with. Instead of using disposable juice boxes, they should just buy milk in bulk and serve them in washable reusable cups.

    • @kdap1000
      @kdap1000 Год назад +13

      I agree.Who is gona recycle the bricks and the tiles full of aluminium pieces? Better serving it in paper cups or glass

    • @DeeP_BosE
      @DeeP_BosE Год назад +9

      PET (polyethylene terephthalate) | PETRA is from where TETRApak comes from... phthalates can leach from PET plastic 24*7 , and accelerated with every degree rise in temp. total GREENWASH for this never ending cycle

    • @wallacechui9857
      @wallacechui9857 Год назад +4

      @@DeeP_BosE Cool info. But everyone under this comment already agrees that plastic is bad. So who is this for?

    • @skynotaname2229
      @skynotaname2229 Год назад +8

      Or put the milk in glass bottles... or waxed paper milk cartons...

  • @judithangal6754
    @judithangal6754 Год назад +59

    A correction: Tetra pack is a Swedish based company and not Swiss.

    • @ake_lindblom
      @ake_lindblom Год назад +4

      The HQ has actually been moved to Switzerland, but I agree, it's like calling IKEA Dutch.

    • @Ass_of_Amalek
      @Ass_of_Amalek Год назад

      øøf

    • @sammylevikemp
      @sammylevikemp Год назад +2

      Tetra Pak is a Swedish-Swiss multinational food packaging and processing company with head offices in Lund, Sweden, and Pully, Switzerland.

  • @josephcampbell3097
    @josephcampbell3097 Год назад +8

    How about rethink your packaging if that much work has to go into getting rid of it.

  • @yatesy117
    @yatesy117 Год назад +86

    Great love to see stuff like this and recycling into outdoor furniture

    • @fynkozari9271
      @fynkozari9271 Год назад

      If it's so harmful for earth why did they produce it in the first place? I drink msngo juice using McD paper straw.

  • @ayoutubeuser1278
    @ayoutubeuser1278 Год назад +45

    Surely there must still be a great deal of microplastics in that wood pulp after processing. Still a wonderful initiative

    • @stagnantfox3027
      @stagnantfox3027 Год назад

      to be honest at this point it doesnt matter anymore, newborn babies already have micro plastics in their blood system because we as a species have effectively infected the entire planet with micro plastics already. You'd probably see comparable amounts of plastic in edible fish than recycled wood pulp from multi layered products.

    • @kongyihfann5546
      @kongyihfann5546 Год назад +1

      And phthalate....yikes

  • @Ass_of_Amalek
    @Ass_of_Amalek Год назад +8

    the milk lobby must have done some really crazy promotions in asia. that belief that kids grow tall by consuming dairy products (and that westerners are tall because of it) is super widespread in china, too. that's part of why when china had a huge scandal of melamine-poisoned milk products about 10 years ago, the resulting chinese demand for imported milk powder from better controlled markets in europe, the US, australia and new zealand was enormous, and led to supermarkets all over restricting sale amounts (because the chinese diaspora were buying all the milk powder they could get, to individually ship to china where it was worth much more).

  • @HenryLeslieGraham
    @HenryLeslieGraham Год назад +1

    plastic bricks = more microplastics in the environment = more pollution. well done

  • @DeeP_BosE
    @DeeP_BosE Год назад +4

    YES, keep on increasing more Micro plastic in places where ppl aren't that educated n get rid of it . Great !!

  • @demonatemu
    @demonatemu Год назад +11

    ok but why doesnt tetrapak make their packaging easier to recycle or out of something else...

    • @Iceyfire12
      @Iceyfire12 Год назад

      That would require extensive testing and probably this is their best way of doing things! If someone else can find a better way people would demand for that!

    • @kaspervestergaard2383
      @kaspervestergaard2383 Год назад +1

      @@Iceyfire12 But there are better packaging already though.

  • @JevonWright
    @JevonWright Год назад +2

    > makes 192 billion difficult-to-recycle products a year
    > convinces children they need to work harder

  • @RishiSingh-rn7dv
    @RishiSingh-rn7dv Год назад +3

    Yum !
    Microplastics in my food , drinking water , breathable air and now my Walls as well.
    Nothing like taking like Microplastics in the morning better than coffee , take that Nescafe 🤛

  • @nopubli8548
    @nopubli8548 Год назад +25

    When we were little the milk containers were several liters of glass or in metal jars (100% reusable), but now they give them individual containers of Milk Cartons (with plastic, cardboard and aluminum) ... they have made us idiots.

    • @arti3973
      @arti3973 Год назад +2

      That is true - and proudly saying the milk can be fresh for up to one year - sic! The lifespan of that cartoon is probably counted in several days. But hey, lets make a s**t on carpet so we could sell our carpet cleaning solution for the problem we made ourselves

    • @TheTolubo
      @TheTolubo Год назад

      @@arti3973 i am from switzerland and we use TetraPacks also for other liquids like icetea and the hold much longer than a year to be honest.

    • @arti3973
      @arti3973 Год назад +1

      @@TheTolubo well, I live in europe, so Im also a part of problem buying that stuff - the afterthought I got is that I cant remember when the milk in bags have dissapeared from eastern europe - now they seems more sustainable than tetrapacks and plastic bottles.

    • @DeeP_BosE
      @DeeP_BosE Год назад +1

      This is just eye wash, bcz u cant see micro-plastic floating around when u walk on plastic bricks. increasing more Micro plastic in places where ppl aren't that educated n get rid of it . Great !!

    • @_GMP_
      @_GMP_ Год назад +3

      Rather than improving distribution & transport system for more efficiency
      They changed the whole packaging
      In Indian school milk powder is provided by govt & local schools mix water & drink reusable stainless steel glass

  • @steven8148
    @steven8148 Год назад +3

    Omg...look at the amount of energy being used to recycle those item. Something is still not right

  • @joeshmoe6930
    @joeshmoe6930 Год назад +1

    I love how yall keep making stuff out of garbage like it's not just going to end up in the ocean again or some shit. Yay.

  • @debrawest292
    @debrawest292 Год назад +2

    Now that's solving problems in good way.. love it..

  • @ericakusske3321
    @ericakusske3321 Год назад +6

    I was literally just talking with my husband 2 hours about corporate responsibility for post consumer waste of the products they produce.
    This sounds like a good start. But why is this recycling program that was started by Tetra Pak in 2006 in Thailand not at least collecting in and processing near every major city globally 16 years later? And what do we do with these building materials when they are eventually degraded and broken or abandoned?
    So it sounds like a good start but I have questions.

    • @warapornmahlman8603
      @warapornmahlman8603 Год назад

      Erica what kind of the material of your roof made from? (I bet they are not from the recyccle milk container) Same question to you what would you do if your roof is degrading?

    • @bxck
      @bxck Год назад +1

      Microplasics, too.

    • @ericakusske3321
      @ericakusske3321 Год назад

      @Waraporn Mahlman corrugated steel. I've got another 15 years on this roof at least. It was put on 5 years ago. And when it is time to replace it, I get to use the old stuff to make raised garden or greenhouse beds, or chop it up and melt it down in the forge out in our workshop to make cast things. We're pretty handy people.

  • @Speckadactyl
    @Speckadactyl Год назад +3

    This video is some great press, I’m sure this project will go no further after it’s done bringing in good will

  • @pizazazaza
    @pizazazaza Год назад +150

    This isn't the solution, this is just a diversion.

    • @jbaby362
      @jbaby362 Год назад +4

      Indeed

    • @Jibberish18
      @Jibberish18 Год назад +27

      This is a clever solution but it has major downsides. For one, these bricks will be leeching plastic for YEARS as they slowly degrade. For two, those workers that are standing around breathing and touching in all of that micro plastic and aluminum. And so many other things that this video doesn’t show.
      As you said, it’s solution made solely for the company to continue to make their flawed packages rather than spend the money to change them into something much more easily recyclable and impactful. Shameful.

    • @DursunX
      @DursunX Год назад +4

      accurate observation.
      the chasm between the two is still governed by convenience and profit.

    • @Leepiecheneef
      @Leepiecheneef Год назад +3

      ok and?

    • @hollowone777
      @hollowone777 Год назад

      @@Leepiecheneef change your consumption habits. I hope that's not too difficult for you. You're a coward if you do nothing.

  • @sidehop
    @sidehop Год назад +5

    I'm on the side of recycling programs can be reduced by not producing products with horrible material to begin with. We all know in the US, recycling was a total marketing scam to make us believe it was being truly recycled which was not. I don't trust these companies making any significant impact as they're not trying or care enough for better innovation.

  • @ermv
    @ermv Год назад +2

    Great! More microplastics on the environment... Plastics should be tightly controlled, such as nuclear waste. Every single molecule of plastics should be accounted for and kept in storage until mankind finds out a way to properly dispose of it

  • @ayeshaclassesgk
    @ayeshaclassesgk Год назад +6

    Business insider❤️ I love your vids, keep it up!❤️Alway's remember to keep your head up high and held high and keep doing what you love and what makes you happy

  • @sisterofslaanesh666
    @sisterofslaanesh666 Год назад +34

    It's something, and that's what matters - we try and keep going and we will get there with recycling.

  • @kingkushoriginal3017
    @kingkushoriginal3017 Год назад +1

    Takes the old cardboard house to the next level

  • @arjuniyer5610
    @arjuniyer5610 Год назад

    What a page really enjoying watching your videos and the details

  • @camazotzz
    @camazotzz Год назад +2

    recycling is mostly a justification for single use containers to exist. Single use plastics are rarely if ever recycled this piece is likely green washing for Tetrapak so they get good PR meanwhile the vast majority of the waste they produce still ends in the landfill or worst, the ocean.

  • @youredxspanktube
    @youredxspanktube Год назад +1

    the philippines should follow suit this is amazing!

  • @deandee8082
    @deandee8082 Год назад +1

    the world needs to start doing this!

    • @bxck
      @bxck Год назад +1

      No, I don't think so. The amount of microplastics being inhaled in the factory and escaping into the environment will cause more issues than it will fix.

  • @josechristianbaltazar4535
    @josechristianbaltazar4535 Год назад

    Ang galing nito sana Meron din sa pinas nito

  • @jimrichards3916
    @jimrichards3916 Год назад

    Brilliant!

  • @vaishnavisingh059
    @vaishnavisingh059 Год назад

    Creative and innovative solution for waste management.

  • @iambrian769
    @iambrian769 Год назад

    With Terapak we won't have alot of drinks we enjoy so good effort. Watched From The Caribbean 🇻🇨

  • @richardjohnson9543
    @richardjohnson9543 Год назад +5

    This seems like a great idea but how durable is it? Would a house built with these materials still be standing after a couple of decades or more being exposed to the elements? And the bricks are lighter than water which means a flood would be disastrous

    • @DeeP_BosE
      @DeeP_BosE Год назад

      PET (polyethylene terephthalate) | PETRA is from where TETRApak comes from... phthalates can leach from PET plastic 24*7 , and accelerated with every degree rise in temp. total GREENWASH for this never ending cycle

    • @kaspervestergaard2383
      @kaspervestergaard2383 Год назад

      Probably haven't tested shit.

  • @georginaclarke7937
    @georginaclarke7937 Год назад

    Excellent👍 use of tetra pack this should be worldwide

  • @dohnlabalaba9470
    @dohnlabalaba9470 Год назад +2

    I wish they could donate this roofs to my school. Our students come from low socio-economic background. Most of our roof are rusted and are beginning to leak. I have written to companies for sponsors but no one seems to help in our country. The ministry of education gives money for the school in budget allocation to cover many focus area but our roofs are expensive to buy per iron sheet to cover affected buildings.

  • @samirakhaliq5512
    @samirakhaliq5512 Год назад +6

    It's a very good idea....but my question would be..... how much fuel/energy does it require to make these bricks and roofing sheets.....if you are burning more fuel and producing toxic chemicals in the process then it's efficiency is questionable

    • @arti3973
      @arti3973 Год назад +4

      The answer is simple - it is not. Its not cheaper nor efficient. The material probably get very brittle after just few years - plastic isnt that good resisting UV light, not mentioning that nobody knows what chemicals might be released in that process

  • @delavan9141
    @delavan9141 Год назад

    Amazing! Floating bricks!

  • @tomholroyd7519
    @tomholroyd7519 Год назад +1

    200 BILLION!
    I remember being shocked as a child when I went to an aquarium, that when a turtle shit in the water, a dozen fish swam up to eat it. This is good. Make your product easier to eat!

  • @K4R007
    @K4R007 Год назад

    I love this channel.

  • @JohnHausser
    @JohnHausser Год назад +1

    Insert a McDonald’s🍔 patty joke
    Cheers from San Diego California 🇺🇸

  • @nitikashanker376
    @nitikashanker376 Год назад

    Superb idea

  • @Shushi.-
    @Shushi.- Год назад +1

    Oh wow never have been this early,
    30 seconds ago?!

  • @Sillyboy9572
    @Sillyboy9572 Год назад

    This is brilliant 🎉

  • @JeffreyStrader
    @JeffreyStrader Год назад

    WOW!

  • @yodaz101
    @yodaz101 Год назад

    That is wild.....go for it...Nice...

  • @GenknownTutorial
    @GenknownTutorial Год назад

    Wow, Cool innovations...

  • @americanandpunjabilifevlog3951

    Good, anything that can reduce waste is the best thing… Let’s make the world best again🌍

  • @Veritech
    @Veritech Год назад +2

    When you do this you just create microplastics that are released into the environment. For example, when a plastic block gets cut, broken, or breaks down from the sun, it releases plastic into the environment.

  • @creativemedia.
    @creativemedia. Год назад +4

    This should be implement in India

    • @DeeP_BosE
      @DeeP_BosE Год назад

      PET (polyethylene terephthalate) | PETRA is from where TETRApak comes from... phthalates can leach from PET plastic 24*7 , and accelerated with every degree rise in temp. total GREENWASH for this never ending cycle

  • @GG_420
    @GG_420 Год назад +2

    This brick breakes down faster than normal plastic and produces tons of microplastic

  • @NameEncrypted
    @NameEncrypted Год назад

    The targeted group is small they could have used glass bottles to eliminate waste. It's poor industry gives birth to problem which indeed is solved by innovative ideas 👍

  • @hanzee9008
    @hanzee9008 Год назад

    The best 👍👍👍

  • @mannyespinola9228
    @mannyespinola9228 Год назад

    Thank you for this video

  • @user-kp2ov1gm4w
    @user-kp2ov1gm4w Год назад +1

    1:41 She is soooo cute, reminds me of my niece.

  • @radow869
    @radow869 Год назад

    It's good they are teaching the children to be responsible.

  • @annabelleh478
    @annabelleh478 Год назад

    Good resources

  • @QuietStormX
    @QuietStormX Год назад

    Great!!!!!!

  • @josephmessner5312
    @josephmessner5312 Год назад +6

    This is a good idea for re-use !

  • @rita2959
    @rita2959 3 месяца назад

    Molto bravi. Esempio entusiasmante.

  • @thedaveiknow.
    @thedaveiknow. Год назад

    Maziwa ya nyayo.

  • @ieshi23
    @ieshi23 Год назад

    I remember that in Chile there was a similar campaign after the 2010 earthquake (and tsunami). Though I never saw the results and couldn't find much on google

  • @radow869
    @radow869 Год назад

    That is cool!

  • @l0gical974
    @l0gical974 Год назад

    I love how all videos like this are anywhere but the USA, gotta love it lol, america needs to step up its game

    • @willworkfordoge
      @willworkfordoge Год назад

      This is likely because these recycled products don't stand up to materials testing in the US or other 1st world countries. Products probably not allowed in construction because they break down too quickly or release microplastics into the water table.

  • @Socrates21stCentury
    @Socrates21stCentury Год назад

    Nice job!

  • @ll3590
    @ll3590 Год назад

    Très bonne initiative

  • @axelo6450
    @axelo6450 Год назад +2

    Tetrapak isn’t a Swiss company it’s from Sweden.

  • @TheNinjatsu
    @TheNinjatsu Год назад

    Very creative but it only increases the usage of plastic instead of minimizing it

  • @DeeP_BosE
    @DeeP_BosE Год назад +1

    GREEEN WASH

  • @willcookmakeup
    @willcookmakeup Год назад +18

    Now this is super cool. What a fantastic idea and it really presents huge benefits to many people. I love that they can make it into basically anything they want and all of it would otherwise be trash

  • @peculiar_wood
    @peculiar_wood Год назад

    I think that the amount of cartons it takes for a single brick is a good thing. Taking up a lot less space.

  • @lancemillward1912
    @lancemillward1912 Год назад +5

    this is not sustainable. the labour and energy involved and the 500 cartons required to make one brick is not a solution this is greenwashing.

  • @mj-hk6iv
    @mj-hk6iv Год назад

    Amazing

  • @SherwinIRL
    @SherwinIRL Год назад +2

    This is so innovative and cool

  • @makerbotplanet
    @makerbotplanet Год назад

    This whole thing is a tetrapak PR campaign. Tetrapak is the company that created this problem in the first place by mixing cardboard and plastic when nobody else was doing that. It makes tetrapaks unrecyclable by traditional means. Just because they have now "solved" the problem they've created by turning it into "low cost housing alternatives for the developing world" doesn't offset the huge amount of waste that they themselves manufactured

  • @ent1311
    @ent1311 Год назад

    A good idea would be to print the number of cartons that are in each brick on the brick.

  • @froginthewaves8450
    @froginthewaves8450 Год назад

    Nice, those kids are being brought up right.

  • @123hattan
    @123hattan Год назад +2

    Could they just not decrease some layers? I mean the original Tetrapack cartons are just eco-unfriendly.

  • @gavinpeterson5323
    @gavinpeterson5323 Год назад

    to see that the homes they are helping rebuild were damaged by a storm in the first place, next time a big one comes and tears that down too, it’s back into the environment.

  • @hoodieninja_7203
    @hoodieninja_7203 Год назад +1

    Well shit, a quarter of output is a lot better than I was expecting.

  • @12380123
    @12380123 Год назад

    Good step showing circular economy..but need to invest in the program

  • @matzacomn
    @matzacomn Год назад

    Good job Thailand!

  • @Hans-yb5jc
    @Hans-yb5jc Год назад

    nice photo OP, dude

  • @ladytamaya4737
    @ladytamaya4737 Год назад +24

    When I think of world population and the daily waste, it is petrifying 😮 the idea of recycling milk cartons is great. My only concern was to see some recycling factory workers not using gloves and proper footwear. A flimsy face mask is not optimal either. Otherwise 👏👏👏

  • @geekbruin
    @geekbruin Год назад +1

    Greenwashing says “heeeeeeey!”

  • @tonysmokoni7835
    @tonysmokoni7835 Год назад

    “Had too much chocolate to eat and now you’re constipated? Simply eat this chocolate laxative!”
    “Kids in Guatemala are dying for your coffee? Worry not, for 5% of our proceeds go to helping them”
    Another example of a solution that only exists to keep the problem.

  • @sadottbarrera
    @sadottbarrera Год назад +1

    Eventually all this plastic will end on our drinking water and on the ocean. Nothing last do ever😢

  • @quasar9111
    @quasar9111 Год назад

    India..look and learn, clean and safe

  • @yomo6325
    @yomo6325 Год назад

    kinda cool

  • @tomo1168
    @tomo1168 Год назад +1

    that is not REcycling, but DOWNcycling.
    Still, better than burning or dumping it.

  • @ANTSMR_Dango
    @ANTSMR_Dango Год назад

    They could implement a „Pfand“ system. Pay 2-5 Bath per Box but get it back at the store if you bring it back. Most people would return them and some would earn money collecting them from the street.

  • @taiwanchina88
    @taiwanchina88 Год назад

    Cool

  • @brandoferg6460
    @brandoferg6460 Год назад

    Me and the boys on the fork loft 😂