I think it’s time to have a conversation about the massive amount of hidden waste created by the likes of Amazon through free returns.
From TFA:
"In 2022, returns cost retailers about $816 billion in lost sales. That’s nearly as much as the U.S. spent on public schools and almost twice the cost of returns in 2020. The return process, with transportation and packaging, also generated about 24 million metric tons of planet-warming carbon dioxide emissions in 2022.
"UPS transports those items to the retailer’s warehouses dedicated to processing returns. This step of the process costs the retailer money – 66% of the cost of a $50 item by one estimate – and emits carbon dioxide as trucks and planes carry items hundreds of miles. The plastic, paper or cardboard from the return package becomes waste.
“In 2019, about 5 billion pounds of waste from returns were sent to landfills, according to an estimate by the return technology platform Optoro. By 2022, the estimated waste had nearly doubled to about 9.5 billion pounds.”
For those of us in the metric world, 9.5 billion pounds is around 4.3 billion kilograms.
https://fortune.com/2023/06/14/amazon-returns-ecommerce-how-bad-big-problem-816-billion/
@green #sustainability @technology@beehaw.org @technology@lemmy.ml #CircularEconomy #Waste #Business #Economics #Recycling #Environment
CBC did a whole expose on this! Really interesting video: https://youtu.be/W1yqcagavfY
@ajsadauskas @green @technology@beehaw.org @technology@lemmy.ml
Hmmm…
I don’t think Amazon is the root cause here.
And it’s certainly not the consumer’s right to return things.
Rather it’s the non existent life cycle management for a lot of products and/or that it’s “not profitable” to restore some products to “as new” and to sell them again. So #rightorepair ?
We could talk about packaging tech too, but that’s an obvious one that already gets lots of attention.