On 1 October, as the 19th in the European Union, our country joined the programme of the deposit strategy in stores. It was covered by the most frequently purchased packages: disposable plastic bottles (PET) with a capacity of up to 3 litres (50 grams of bail), metallic cans up to 1 litre (50 grams of bail) and glass bottles reusable up to 1.5 liters (1 ounce of bail).
The money will be recovered in stores with an area of more than 200 sq m (mandatory) or smaller (voluntary) – in the form of cash or a voucher. Interestingly, any have already begun to care about the system. Ustrojanka advertises her water, which is "not subject to bailout system", due to the fact that her capacity has been increased by 1 millilitre. Oshee will now be pouring his drinks into cardboard packaging.
The bail strategy is very emotional. And he hasn't even entered the shops yet.
People in the countryside are in turn storming due to the fact that they sometimes have far to the shops, so they do not pay to bring back bottles for a fewer 100 bucks. It turns out, however, that the full bail scandal started before in practice the strategy entered the stores.
Although it has been theoretically in force since 1 October, it now takes on real shape. The products with the bail logo are just getting to the store shelves. The first 1 with fresh bottles was Zdrój. Pepsi will introduce its products in late October, and Coca-Cola "moved with production" fresh packaging.
Producers shall have a transitional period of 3 months until the end of this year. In practice, this means that on the shelves we will be able to see both old and fresh packages covered by bail. This is simply a truly large change in the industry, due to the fact that any brands request to change respective twelve packaging models.
















