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Si vous retiriez l'autocollant d'un bouchon de baume à lèvres, qu'en feriez-vous ? (Et supposons que vous ne sachiez pas qu'il est compostable, car il est difficile de le faire savoir clairement).
- Le jeter à la poubelle ?
- Vous pouvez les mettre dans votre bac à compost commercial (et avez-vous même accès à un bac à compost commercial, car vous ne pouvez pas composter ces déchets dans votre jardin) ?
- Si vous étiez à notre place, le feriez-vous ?
- Acheter les autocollants en plastique moins chers ?
- Achetez les autocollants en plastique compostable (remarque : les autocollants en papier sont généralement renforcés par du plastique).
- Arrêtez complètement d'apposer des autocollants, car quelle est la probabilité que quelqu'un « altère » le baume à lèvres pendant son transport de chez nous jusqu'à vous ?
CLIQUEZ ICI et saisissez le code LIPBALM20 lors du paiement. si vous souhaitez 20 % de réduction sur le baume à lèvres.
commentaires
Stop buying lip balm with plastic stickers!!
We have a home composting system, so the cap sticker would end up in the garbage regardless. I vote stop stickering!
Although, I like the thought, the compostable stickers are probably not worth is as they are very small and right now there are too many catches on the compostables. I am hoping that will change. I would suggest wait for a plant based sticker.
If there were a sticker I would toss in garbage assuming it’s plastic. I don’t feel there is any need for the sticker as you said who would mess with it. If you had to have a sticker why not use a paper sticker.
A lot of products use a paper label.
Thanks for all that you do. It makes me feel like I am doing a little something for the planet every where I can.
1- I would stick it to something else that would later be thrown out or recycled. I think that anything that breaks down (a lot) faster than plastic is a step in the right decision.
2- the third choice is best for me. Maybe a thin piece of recycled wrapping paper around it?
Thanks for asking. Wish government could work this way. Cheers.
Don’t use stickers! End of problem.
Ideally the container AND seal would be BPI certified compostable. And this would be made clear to the customer. If not, not using plastic is second best— all plastic production is related to toxins and green house gases. Plastics must be removed from production whenever possible.
This is a hard one! I compost everything – mostly at home but we also have access to commercial compost. But since everything comes wrapped in plastic, my knee-jerk reaction for something so small would be to toss it in the trash.
Question: Is there no way to have a “this has not been tampered with” paper wrapping around the lip balm top? Or even the whole lip balm? Paper would be recyclable, and then people would feel safe knowing it hadn’t been messed with.
I would either not sticker them or get the compostable stickers. I would end up throwing the sticker away, but is it better to throw away a compostable sticker than a plastic sticker? You could say in the description “THIS ITEM DOES NOT COME WITH A STICKER” and explain the reasons why. I feel like your customers would still buy this item, especially if it has less waste involved.
Honestly, I would throw the sticker into my household garbage. This kind of compostable material just doesn’t make sense. As you know, I’m sure, very little of it is actually composted. It feels a bit like greenwashing enablement.
Going stickerless seems okay to me. Your products don’t sit on a retail shelf, so I agree tampering is unlikely.