KC Coffee Shop Offers Environmental Fuel for Thought
November 22, 2019 | Emily Woodring | 2 min read
The road to environmental sustainability may be long and arduous. But one small local coffee shop is taking a big step.
Oddly Correct recently announced that it is no longer offering any single-use paper or plastic containers. Instead, the shop is offering to-go drinks in $1 reusable and recyclable glass jars wrapped in a washable sleeve.
The shop’s motivation is clear. Tens of billions of coffee cups are simply tossed after a single use every year. Paper cups take about 30 years to decompose, while plastic can take hundreds of years.
“Even as a small company, we feel we have to do what we can to minimize our negative impact and make our own process as sustainable as possible..,” the folks at Oddly announced on Facebook. “Eliminating the waste from single-use beverage containers is one step we know we can take to have an impact where we are, right now.”
Oddly took the hint from a coffee shop in Des Moines. And over time, the move might make just as much sense economically as environmentally, because Oddly won’t need to constantly order more single-use cups.
“They cost us more than a dollar to get, but some of that we make up by hopefully over continued re-use, not having to continue to buy single-use products,” said manager Mike Schroeder.
Seems like simple math. Some might argue, brilliant.
Reading these stories is free, but telling them is not. Start your monthly gift now to support Flatland’s community-focused reporting.
Related Stories
The End of the Pesticide Arms Race?
To spray or not to spray, that’s the question for farmers. Pests can be the make-or-break factor for a season’s harvest. Between 20% to 40% of global crop production is lost to pests annually, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. Conventional chemical pesticides have traditionally addressed this challenge, but their…
Hundreds of Bee Species Face Decline in Missouri and Kansas
To Tom Schroeder, every bee is a work of art. His own words, backed up with hundreds of photos in his camera roll from the prairies and woods of Kansas City WildLands. With more than two decades of volunteering with the group, he’s become a bee enthusiast– but not an expert, he’ll clarify. “We’re the…
Developers eye idle KCK power plant as the region pursues data center projects
A defunct Kansas City, Kansas, power station astride polluted land has caught the eye of investors eager to develop an energy-hungry data center. The investors have offered to pay millions of dollars for the environmental remediation of the Kansas City Board of Public Utilities’ defunct Quindaro Power Station — and then some. The Unified Government…


