If you have a lot of (still) full or empty beer bottles at home, you can be happy: Empties take a good time with Sunday. For the first time in more than 40 years, the beer deposits was increased and that was strong.
After more than 40 years, the deposit for reusable glass bottles rises with Sunday of 9 cents (previously 1.2 Schilling) to 20 cents. According to the Brewery Association, those glass bottles that are currently stored in the supermarket are influenced by 9 cents by the increase in the Pedicher: this includes the classic 0.5-liter beer bottles, but also white glass bottles with screw cap as well as a lot of glasses Bottles of 0.33 liters.
After these reusable glass bottles are “90 percent” of beer bottles, the Association of Breweries is, according to its own initiated, negotiated and implemented information. “The low down payment apparently led to more and more people who had repelled the bottles and so removed the recycling,” said the chairman of Karl Schwarz recently.
Decorated bottles cause millions of damage
Glass bottles of Ree-Weg that are missing in the glass container countries instead of returning to the supermarket in the breweries and other drink producers and, according to the association, causes damage in the millions for industry. “We assume that the higher deposit will ensure that the return intervals will shorten,” says the director of the Brewery Association, Florian Berger.
The association expects the bottles to come back more and more because of the increase in the bracelet. “This saves a lot of resources in the highly energy -intensive production of glass bottles,” says Association chairman Schwarz. Reusable glass bottles can be topped up up to 40 times.
Source: Krone

I’m Ben Stock, a journalist and author at Today Times Live. I specialize in economic news and have been working in the news industry for over five years. My experience spans from local journalism to international business reporting. In my career I’ve had the opportunity to interview some of the world’s leading economists and financial experts, giving me an insight into global trends that is unique among journalists.