Starbucks plans a major change to your orders (some customers are angry)

The international coffee-bar chain has been wanting to make a change for a while ─ but the cost may be too great.

Sep 18, 2023 - 22:30
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Starbucks plans a major change to your orders (some customers are angry)

Pause for a moment, if you will, and consider the most highly respected items in a metropolitan area. 

If you're into working fashion, it may be a Hermes Birkin bag. Perhaps you pair it with a set of Gucci Jordaan loafers and a Chanel tweed suit. And if you're serious about selling the whole look, you pair it with a venti Starbucks  (SBUX) - Get Free Report cup of coffee. 

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Few things have more pull in the chain-food sector than the Starbucks cups. They're every bit as divisive as they are coveted. 

The chain tweaks its cups every so often: They become red in celebration of the holiday season and limited-edition reusables are issued for Pride month. And those changes can become an issue. 

In 2015, for example, when Starbucks did away with green designs on the red cups and opted instead for plain red cups, the chain was accused of being anti-Christian, and presidential candidate Donald Trump called for a boycott. 

"I have one of the most successful Starbucks, in Trump Tower. Maybe we should boycott Starbucks?" he posited in November 2015 at a rally. 

"I don’t know. Seriously, I don’t care. That’s the end of that lease, but who cares? If I become president, we’re all going to be saying Merry Christmas again, that I can tell you. That I can tell you."

A guest holds a Starbucks coffee cup during London Fashion Week Fall Winter 2020 on Feb. 16, 2020, in London.

Edward Berthelot/Getty Images

Starbucks proposes a new cup plan

Starbucks has been not-so-quietly weighing the idea of doing away with its disposable cups. In addition to bringing an email deluge to its headquarters PR department each year, the cups contribute to significant environmental waste. 

As the world's largest coffee-bar chain, Starbucks goes through more than 8,000 paper cups a minute, according to Clean Water Action writes.

All that "adds up to more than four billion a year," Clean Water Action says. Some "1.6 million trees are harvested every year for all of those single-use cups. Since these cups are lined with plastic, they are not really recyclable ─ only four U.S. cities even accept Starbucks paper cups for recycling," 

In other words, a majority of those cups end up in the trash bin. 

Since 2008, Starbucks has made a push to go reusable, with mixed results. 

As with its pride cups, it sells reusable plastic cups and mugs that have garnered some traction over the years. But customers still wince at the idea of having to bring their own cups to a cafe or ─ or worse ─ share mugs that others have used. 

“Our vision for the cup of the future — and our Holy Grail, if you will — is that the cup still has the iconic symbol on it. It’s just as a reusable cup,” SBUX's sustainability head, Michael Kobori, said in mid-September. 

Starbucks has been at this for a while. In 2008, the cafe said that by 2015 it wanted every single one of its cups to be either recyclable or reusable. Clearly, that hasn't happened. Only 1.2% of its cups sold in 2022 were reusable or recyclable. 

So, clearly, it's got a long way to go. And customers are less than enthused about the plan. Some claim their locations are using reusable cups but seem to pose a hygiene quandary. 

Others are skeptical about just how environmentally friendly the move really is. 

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