NEWS|World Foot Recycling Plastic Cup Recycling Transforming Small Artificial Football Field

World Foot Recycling Plastic Cup Recycling Transforming Small Artificial Football Field
2019-04-23
News Date 2019/4/19 News Sources Public View
 
Last year’s World Cup, there was a beer sponsor who used more than 3.2 million plastic cups, and now they will have 50,000 of them.
Recycling into a small artificial football field, the manufacturer also plans to use 100% green electricity to make beer in the future.
The goal is to reduce the carbon footprint by 25%.
The host city of the 2014 Winter Olympics Sochi, the players enjoy the fun of football,
stepping on the white court under their feet, the raw materials are actually from the beer plastic cups used during the World Cup last year.
 
Thamlov, the beer marketing chief, said: "We used 50,000 cups to make this course."
 
During the World Cup last year, the beer sponsor used more than 3.2 million plastic cups, some of which were taken home by fans as souvenirs.
The beer company recycled and reused the collected plastic cups.
A small football field of 65 meters long and 42 meters wide, the skin wear is the biggest feature, and if there is a free throw contest in the future,
it is quite suitable. Italy, who won the World Championship in 2006, the retired football star Materazzi,
who used to adapt to this different course when he was in the world. He is very novel, but it is no different in use, but the color is strange.
 
Italy's retired football star Materazzi said: "Football can be played at any venue, even on the asphalt road, so playing football is really borderless,
I am sure this is a very good course, I I also believe that it will be widely used in the future. When I came to Russia, I played on artificial turf.
Even with the Moscow locomotive, it was artificial turf. Even in this color, I can still play."
 
Using green electricity to reduce carbon by 25%, equivalent to 48,000 cars a year on the road. In addition, for football fans,
watching beer in the game is a traditional match, but the production of beer requires electricity, and the carbon footprint produced has an environmental impact.
Very big, the beer company admits that they sell about 41 million bottles of beer a day in the world, and the annual carbon footprint is 226,145 tons.
Therefore, in recent years, large quantities of green electricity, that is, carbon dioxide emissions during the production of electricity, have been purchased.
The quantity is close to zero. The main source is solar energy, wind power or geothermal energy.
It is expected that the global green beer process will reduce the carbon footprint by 25% in 2025, which is equivalent to reducing 48,000 vehicles on the road in one year.
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