Waste, environment and climate change
Waste, environment and climate change
reWINE is a project to promote the reuse of bottles in the wine industry to reduce the production of waste, greenhouse effect gases, and cost savings for wine producers. The project aimed to implement a pilot project to demonstrate the viability of a sustainable system for reuse of glass bottles in the Catalan wine industry. To achieve this, the following activities were carried out:
One of the difficulties of developing this kind of project is finding treatment plants for the reuse of glass bottles (most of them disappeared years ago). The participation of the different stakeholders was also a key factor to implement the pilot project.
The main objective of the reWINE project is to design and implement a pilot project to demonstrate the viability of a sustainable system for the reuse of glass bottles in the Catalan wine industry. Specific objectives:
Project type Waste prevention; Reuse circuits; Glass bottles; Circular economy
Partners The project involved consumers, producers, bars, restaurants, wholesalers and shops to make a pilot study of the reuse of wine bottles, from washing, labelling, bottling and distribution on the market and until their collection.
Main partners and promoters were, concretely: Autonomous University of Barcelona Research Park, Catalan foundation for the reduction of waste and responsible consumption – Rezero, Inèdit, Catalan Waste Agency, Cooperativa Falset Marçà, Torres (cellar), Infinity (plant for the collection, selection, washing and reuse of wine and cava bottles).
Dates 2018- ongoing
Funding reWINE had a total budget of 991,309€, of which 60% was provided by the European Union
The reWINE pilot test has shown that the reuse of bottles in the wine sector is technically feasible and more environmentally friendly.
The pilot test involved 7 Catalan wineries, more than 30 shops, more than 50 restaurants, 2 logistics companies, 3 green points and 2 glass washing plants.
It started in September 2018, intending to recover 100,000 bottles of wine through different systems. During the 20 months that the pilot test lasted, 150,000 bottles with the reWINE label were sold and 822,399 were recovered.
To achieve this, different logistic scenarios were explored. Wine bottles were collected through both the participating restaurants and shops with incentive systems. For example, several supermarkets paid 10 cents to consumers who returned a bottle with the reWINE label. Some small establishments applied a deposit to the bottle (between 0.13 and 0.5 cents), which was returned once they had recovered the bottle.
There have been 6 factors determining the implementation of wine bottle recycling: 1) characteristics of the bottle (model, label and capping system), 2) bottles transport, 3) distance to the washing facility, 4) storage capacity, 5) hygienic storage conditions and 6) incentives for returning the empty bottles.
https://www.ereuse.org/en/
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