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posted by Fnord666 on Saturday December 14 2019, @09:13AM   Printer-friendly
from the to-the-dump-to-the-dump-to-the-dump-dump-dump dept.

The CBC's "The Current" has a story about how online returns are frequently sent to the dump

'It's pretty staggering': Returned online purchases often sent to landfill, journalist's research reveals

Do you order different sizes of clothing online, knowing you can return the one that doesn't fit?

Did you know the ones you return are sometimes sent straight to landfill?

Online shopping has created a boom in perfectly good products ending up in dumpsters and landfills, according to Adria Vasil, an environmental journalist and managing editor of Corporate Knights magazine.

Amazon has faced accusations of destroying returned items in both France and Germany.

The issue also affects unsold products. Burberry admitted in 2018 that it had incinerated £90 million worth of clothing and accessories in the previous five years. The company stopped the policy last year after a public outcry.

Why? You're returning something that's new and fine?

It actually costs a lot of companies more money to put somebody on the product, to visually eyeball it and say, Is this up to standard, is it up to code? Is this going to get us sued? Did somebody tamper with this box in some way? And is this returnable? And if it's clothing, it has to be re-pressed and put back in a nice packaging. And for a lot of companies, it's just not worth it. So they will literally just incinerate it, or send it to the dumpster

So when you order 3 sizes "to be sure you get the one you want", two of them are probably going to the dump. Not very environmentally friendly. .


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  • (Score: 2) by barbara hudson on Sunday December 15 2019, @04:16AM (3 children)

    by barbara hudson (6443) <barbara.Jane.hudson@icloud.com> on Sunday December 15 2019, @04:16AM (#932284) Journal

    Whoa! You got something against the handicapped? That a woman in a wheel chair can't get pregnant, or can't be a proper mother, so she'll never need a crib?

    We have enough of a problem with the handicapped being nearly invisible. Let's try not to add to it, hmm?

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  • (Score: 2) by Coward, Anonymous on Sunday December 15 2019, @05:39AM

    by Coward, Anonymous (7017) on Sunday December 15 2019, @05:39AM (#932309) Journal

    You seem to be inferring something opposite of what I wrote. My point is that the old drop-side cribs are much easier to lift babies into and out of for wheelchair users than the new fixed-wall ones.

  • (Score: 2) by Nuke on Sunday December 15 2019, @11:26AM (1 child)

    by Nuke (3162) on Sunday December 15 2019, @11:26AM (#932338)

    We have enough of a problem with the handicapped being nearly invisible.

    Invisible? Around my way they clog the shopping areas with their mobility scooters.

    • (Score: 2) by barbara hudson on Sunday December 15 2019, @06:01PM

      by barbara hudson (6443) <barbara.Jane.hudson@icloud.com> on Sunday December 15 2019, @06:01PM (#932430) Journal

      How about jobs? You know, stuff that really counts in making your life better? Using a scooter to get from point a to point b doesn't do much for your life if you don't have a job to go to.

      Economic and social disenfranchisement, learned dependence, and then the resentment because of that dependence, how many handicapped do you see in your workplace, or at the businesses you visit?

      In many ways disposable fashion is like the handicapped - no longer wanted, not worth fixing up to put back on the market, cheaper to just toss on the garbage heap.

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