• About
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • MICE
Thursday, December 18, 2025
Newsletter
SUBSCRIBE
  • Coffee News
  • Features
    • Industry issues
    • Interviews
    • Knowledge leader
  • Coffee community
    • Competitions
    • Events
    • Get to know
    • People
    • Sustainability
  • Industry insights
    • Café insights
    • Green bean
    • Manufacturers
    • Milk and alt milks
    • Roasters
  • Skills & education
    • Business advice
    • How to
    • Latte art
    • Recipes
    • Research
    • Tutorials
  • Equipment & tech
    • Automation
    • Coffee machines
    • Grinders
    • Milk steaming
    • Roasting technology
    • Technology
  • Café scene
    • Australian Capital Territory
    • New South Wales
    • Northern Territory
    • Queensland
    • South Australia
    • Tasmania
    • Victoria
    • Western Australia
    • New Zealand
No Results
View All Results
  • Coffee News
  • Features
    • Industry issues
    • Interviews
    • Knowledge leader
  • Coffee community
    • Competitions
    • Events
    • Get to know
    • People
    • Sustainability
  • Industry insights
    • Café insights
    • Green bean
    • Manufacturers
    • Milk and alt milks
    • Roasters
  • Skills & education
    • Business advice
    • How to
    • Latte art
    • Recipes
    • Research
    • Tutorials
  • Equipment & tech
    • Automation
    • Coffee machines
    • Grinders
    • Milk steaming
    • Roasting technology
    • Technology
  • Café scene
    • Australian Capital Territory
    • New South Wales
    • Northern Territory
    • Queensland
    • South Australia
    • Tasmania
    • Victoria
    • Western Australia
    • New Zealand
No Results
View All Results
Home

McDonald’s joins Starbucks and Closed Loop Partners to end cup waste

by Sarah Baker
July 18, 2018
in Coffee News
Reading Time: 3 mins read
A A
Starbucks
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Two of the world’s largest food and beverage retailers will identify and commercialise a recyclable and compostable cup which can be used globally.

The NextGen Cup Challenge aims to offer promising solutions on the recovery of single-use cups, with a focus on the fiber-based hot and cold cup, and is working to create a fully recyclable and/or compostable cup in North America.

McDonalds has joined Starbucks, the founding member of the group, to form part of The NextGen Cup Consortium and Challenge. It follows recent commitments by McDonald’s and Starbucks to turn to more sustainable packaging solutions.

The $5 million investment by McDonalds brings the total project fund to $10 million, which kicks off in September and invites innovators, entrepreneurs, industry experts, and recyclers to submit their ideas for the next generation of recyclable and/or compostable cups.

Awardees will receive acceleration funding up to $1 million based on key milestones. Up to seven of the awardees will enter a six-month accelerator program to help scale their solutions.

“McDonald’s is committed to using our scale for good to make positive changes that impact our planet and the communities we serve,” says Marion Gross, Senior Vice President and Chief Supply Chain Officer, McDonald’s USA. “We are excited to join Starbucks and Closed Loop to help solve this pressing challenge as collaboration is key to finding a scalable, lasting global solution.”

Colleen Chapman, Vice President of Global Social Impact focused on sustainability for Starbucks, said that a better cup will benefit the entire industry and the company invite others to join them as we move their efforts forward.

NextGen builds on years of work in the industry and is a critical step in the development of a global end-to-end solution that will potentially allow the 600 billion cups globally to be diverted from landfills and given a second life.

The consortium is building a robust advisory council including leaders in environmental NGOs including World Wildlife Fund (WWF), human-centered design, academic leaders, the paper and plastic industry, recyclers, composters, and municipalities to ensure that the work is grounded in the needs of the entire value chain and the cups make it from shelf to consumer and back through the recovery system to another high value use.

“There has never been a greater need to tackle the ways in which we source and recover materials. McDonald’s participation is a strong step forward in building momentum from major brands to come together and develop innovative approaches to materials waste,” says Erin Simon, Director of Sustainability Research and Development (R&D) and Material Science at WWF, U.S.

“Working together across the entire value chain of these major companies will allow us to create a comprehensive and lasting solution to this critical conservation challenge.”

Kate Daly, Executive Director of the Center for the Circular Economy at Closed Loop Partners says to date, it has received more than 1000 inquiries from companies and individuals interested in participating in the challenge. “We anticipate some exciting and impactful proposals,” she says.

Tags: Closed Loop PartnersCoffeecompostcupsgloballyMcDonaldsrecyclableStarbuckswaste

Related Posts

Danny Andrade has won the 2026 Australian Coffee Roasting Championship.

Danny Andrade wins ASCA Coffee Roasting Championship

by Daniel Woods
December 18, 2025

Blackboard Coffee Roasters’ Danny Andrade has been named winner of the 2026 Australian Coffee Roasters Championship, finishing ahead of Stitch...

Brunetti Classico has opened a new location at Melbourne Airport Terminal 1.

Brunetti Classico takes flight with new airport café

by Daniel Woods
December 17, 2025

Iconic Melbourne café Brunetti Classico is celebrating the opening of yet another location at Melbourne Airport, this time near Gate...

Image: Istvan/stock.adobe.com

Historic European roaster experiments with Brunch Club

by Daniel Woods
December 17, 2025

One of Europe’s oldest coffee roasters, Julius Meinl, has teamed up with a local culinary duo KUBUS to capitalise on...

Join our newsletter

View our privacy policy, collection notice and terms and conditions to understand how we use your personal information.

BeanScene Magazine is committed to promoting, enhancing and growing the coffee industry in Australia as it’s coffee news has captured the attention of coffee roasters, bean and machine importers, café owners, café chain owners and executives, and many of the auxiliary products and services that support the coffee industry in Australia and around the globe.

Subscribe to our newsletter

View our privacy policy, collection notice and terms and conditions to understand how we use your personal information.

About Beanscene

  • About
  • Contact
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Latest magazine
  • Terms & conditions
  • Privacy collection notice
  • Privacy policy

Popular Topics

  • Coffee news
  • Features
  • Coffee community
  • Industry insights
  • Skills & education
  • Equipment & tech
  • Cafe Scene

© 2025 All Rights Reserved. All content published on this site is the property of Prime Creative Media. Unauthorised reproduction is prohibited

No Results
View All Results
NEWSLETTER
SUBSCRIBE
  • Coffee News
  • Features
    • Industry issues
    • Interviews
    • Knowledge leader
  • Coffee community
    • Competitions
    • Events
    • Get to know
    • People
    • Sustainability
  • Industry insights
    • Café insights
    • Green bean
    • Manufacturers
    • Milk and alt milks
    • Roasters
  • Skills & education
    • Business advice
    • How to
    • Latte art
    • Recipes
    • Research
    • Tutorials
  • Equipment & tech
    • Automation
    • Coffee machines
    • Grinders
    • Milk steaming
    • Roasting technology
    • Technology
  • Café scene
    • Australian Capital Territory
    • New South Wales
    • Northern Territory
    • Queensland
    • South Australia
    • Tasmania
    • Victoria
    • Western Australia
    • New Zealand

© 2025 All Rights Reserved. All content published on this site is the property of Prime Creative Media. Unauthorised reproduction is prohibited