Menu Menu
[gtranslate]

GaeaStar’s new coffee cups are made using only clay

San Francisco and Germany-based startup GaeaStar has developed a new disposable coffee cup made from clay. It can be thrown on the ground and discarded with no negative effect on the environment.  

Most of the time, throwing used coffee cups on the ground and walking away is selfish, lazy, and deserving of criticism.

However, these new clay coffee cups created by startup GaeaStar could be the exception to the rule. Made completely from dirt, salt, and water, each cup is 3D-printed and easily disposable with no need for further processing or recycling.

The company tested commercial, public use at coffee shops and ice cream parlours in Berlin and are now moving forward with production in the US. The first cups will be tested in California.

The waste caused by coffee is huge.

A 2016 study reported that up to 50 billion disposable cups are used every year in the US alone, and most end up in landfills. Recycled or composted cups, while a better alternative to single-use plastics, still require energy to be repurposed.

Credit: GaeaStar

GaeaStar says its clay variant cups can be smashed or thrown anyway anywhere, as they’re essentially just dirt. Founder and CEO Sanjeev Mankotia commented that ‘end to end, it comes from the earth and goes back to the earth’.

Clay cups reportedly use roughly 60% less energy to make than plastic or paper cups too, and is no more expensive. GaeaStar also claims its cups are 10 times stronger than paper ones, describing them as ‘the fine China experience with the convenience of disposability.’

The startup’s long-term aim is to sell unique printers to coffee and food places where cups can be produced on an independent basis. Each one takes about ten seconds to print and each company can produce the exact amount they want.

New solutions to disposable, single-use items will become increasingly more urgent throughout this decade. We’ll need to find new ways to facilitate consumer behaviours that don’t damage the planet while also being cost effective. GaeaStar’s cups could be the first of many innovations to breakthrough into mainstream culture.

The quicker we get rid of our plastic habits, the better.

Accessibility