We recently received an email from a concerned customer about recycling our coffee bags. Our president, Jon Rogers responded via email with an update that we thought we'd share.
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We take our obligation to the environment very seriously. As you may know, our company is not only carbon neutral, but actually carbon negative. We actually take more carbon out of the atmosphere, than all of our activities put into it. We also grow our coffee in concert to nature. We are almost 100% shade grown. We convert almost all of the waste generated during processing into fertilizer (via billions of California red worms who devour the waste and emit rich soil) and bio gas (which we use to run the plant).
Sadly, we live in a world of conflicting priorities.
First let me give you some background. Roasted coffee does not like air. The O2 in air will make the coffee go stale and lose it flavor in a reasonably short period of time. To prevent the oxidation, we package our coffee in a multi layer bag that does not let the O2 penetrate. In addition we go to great lengths to make sure that the bag is tightly sealed so that there is no leakage. To prevent O2 penetration one of the 5 layers has to be metallic. That is the conflict, because the metallic layer is not recyclable and cannot be separated from the several layers of plastic materials which make up the bag.
Now the good news. We have been working with one of our suppliers to achieve a bag that keeps the air (O2) out but will be completely recyclable. Actually the bag is made with a material made from sunflower oil. The problem right now is the “gas escape” valve that we put on all of our packages so that we can package the coffee immediately after roasting. [See mentioned valve at the top of the bag in the picture above...] Without the valve, the bag would blow up like a balloon as the gasses trapped in the freshly roasted coffee escape. It seems that we cannot get the valves to adhere to the recyclable bags……yet.
We are working very hard to solve that problem and, they tell me, are reasonably assured of a solution. Please bear with us until we can solve this sticky problem.
- Jon Rogers, President Rogers Family Company
Thanks Jon!!!