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I'll be taking several long-haul flights over the next month. From previous experience I know I'll probably be getting a fair bit of single-use plastic. I am keen on minimising waste, particularly plastic. In my daily life I do this by avoiding anything wrapped in plastic - if it's absolutely unavoidable, I try to find a way to reuse it.

On a flight however, it seems like my options are very limited. I've thought about bringing my own cutlery, but I'm concerned the single-use cutlery provided will just get thrown out anyway. There's also the plastic coverings, which are probably recyclable, but I can't recall seeing them being separated from the general rubbish. There's probably things I haven't thought of as well.

What are some things I can do minimise the waste I am responsible for given that I'm on a flight? I also want to support organisations that are taking waste minimisation seriously. Are there airlines that are taking a pro-active approach to waste minimisation?

Edit: Thank you everyone for the answers. The general trend is order-of-magnitude arguments essentially saying if you take the flight, any other concern is insignificant. I want to make a few comments:

Firstly, no one has provided any data quantifying the environmental impact of 1kg CO2 emissions to (say) 1kg of single-use plastic that goes to landfill. Without this data then the arguments are heuristic at best (although I don't doubt which way the conclusion will fall).

Secondly, CO2 off sets are a thing, and if the companies providing them are to be believed, then your global warming contribution is negated. If that is the case, then the next thing to work on is the waste you generate.

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    Hi Phil - one answer is perhaps dead simple. Just refuse the (rubbish!) meals and everything else offered to you on flights. I've never, ever, taken the lame "peanuts" and similar snacks offered - just think of the saving over a lifetime if everyone did that.
    – Fattie
    Commented May 6, 2019 at 23:35
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    If it makes you feel better, do something to offset the carbon cost of your flight before/after the trip. Plant a hundred trees?
    – Criggie
    Commented May 7, 2019 at 1:07
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    CO2 offsets aren't bad, but it's generally better to emit less CO2 regardless of how many trees you paid someone to plant. You can't just cancel out an arbitrary amount of fossil-fuel burning. @Harper's answer makes an excellent case for thinking of the big picture, as well as minimizing weight. IMO it's by far the best answer, and you should consider accepting it. Commented May 7, 2019 at 1:26
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    Another answer is to take the ultra-budget flights. Absolutely anything extra will be charged, so just don't get charged anything extra!
    – Nelson
    Commented May 7, 2019 at 2:20
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    You are flying but want to save 0.1 kg of plastic? That's like a serial killer asking how to best avoid disturbing the neighbors. Plus I have a certain suspicion what happens to the heated meal you refused: Even more garbage. Commented May 8, 2019 at 5:19

15 Answers 15

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I recognize there are many answers already, and some very good ones:

It is true that the CO2 is also waste, and that it dwarves everything else connected to it. It is also true that you cannot always avoid flying, and in this case it is also good to minimize the impact.

I'd like to focus on what you can do if you have to take the flight. I'll use Europe/New York flights as an example.

Note that I didn't look at plastic waste specifically, but it is safe to assume that burning 1 kg of plastic has roughly the same environmental impact than burning 1 kg of jet fuel - they are both made from crude oil.

You cannot reasonably avoid plastic waste for meals on regular flights

It is virtually impossible to commercially provide in-flight meals without single-use plastic; and there is no airline that does. Any attempt to "fix" rather makes things worse:

If the airline has complimentary meals, they'll stock at least one meal per passenger. If you don't take it, it'll be thrown away, plastic included. Bringing your own meal just adds food waste to the equation. (On budget airlines it does have an effect to not buy the meal, see below).

You could opt for business class, where they have reusable dishes, but you'll multiply your CO2 footprint that way.

Optimize your flights

The best way to reduce your footprint is to avoid as many flights as possible. For business, you may be able to combine trips - e.g. going from New York to London, taking the train to Paris and flying back from there.

You may also be able to travel less often, but stay longer each time.

Savings for taking one trip instead of two: Around 1900 kg (50%) per one-way trip.

Use new plane, go budget, go economy

These are probably the things that help most. Budget airlines will usually use new, fuel-efficient planes and pack a lot of people. Meals aren't included; they'll only pack as much as they expect to sell (meaning that not taking the meal actually has an effect and you can avoid the plastic waste as well). Many budget airlines don't offer in-flight entertainment systems which saves additional weight.

All of this helps:

If you go to New York from London, Norwegian Air Shuttle uses new 787 planes, while British Airlines uses mostly 777s or 747s. And Norwegian fits 350 passengers into a 787, while BA fits only 215.

A "high-density" 787 flight will generate around 830 kg of CO2. A regular flight on a 747 will generate around 1200 kg; one on a 777 still 1060 kg. (A business class flight on a 777 will cause over 1900 kg).

Savings: Up to 370 kg (19%)

Use a different mode of transport, even for parts of the trip

If you're in Berlin, and have a day to spare, you could get the train to London (41 kg) instead of the feeder flight (177 kg). Or take a train to Frankfurt (22 kg) instead of a feeder flight (130 kg) and a direct flight from there.

Savings: 136 kg (0,7%) or 108 kg (0,6%)

Weight matters, but not as much as you think

Using the values from other answers, an additional bag on the NY-London route would be around 14 kg of CO2 (23 kg * 0,2 kg of fuel per 6000km = 4,6 kg of fuel, times 3). This isn't nothing, but it is isn't that much either.

Also, buying new items at your destination may be even worse: Using the formula above, transporting a 0,2 kg shirt one way will cause about 0,1 kg of CO2 to be emitted, but producing a new shirt will generate about 3 kg of CO2.

Savings for one less bag: 14 kg (0,07%)

Compensate your flight

There are various offers to "compensate" your flight through a donation. While this doesn't undo the CO2 emissions, they'll use the money on projects to mitigate your impact to a certain degree.

How much this helps is up for debate - it is certainly better to avoid a flight in the first place, if possible. However, if you cannot avoid a flight you may give this a try.

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    This is a fine answer, but it is a non-trivial task to travel by train from Berlin to London Heathrow in 24 hours. This is why people fly.
    – RedSonja
    Commented May 8, 2019 at 6:53
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    Getting from Berlin to London by train in 24 hours is actually pretty easy. You can buy a ticket online, the journey is about 11-12 hours to get to St. Pancras; you have to change trains twice. As you'll arrive in the evening or late afternoon, you'll probably have to spend the night, though. I grant it is not always an option, but it can be done. Also Berlin-Frankfurt is very feasible by train and may not even add much to your overall trip time.
    – averell
    Commented May 8, 2019 at 18:38
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I doubt you'd be able to take steel cutlery into the aircraft cabin.

Food waste, including packaging, can be subject to biosecurity restrictions at the destination airport, and is often therefore just bagged up and incinerated. (Source)

Long-haul flights have impacts on the environment beyond the issue of cabin waste. At the risk of sounding flippant, if you're really concerned about the impact of your long-haul flight on the environment, don't take the flight!

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  • Comments are not for extended discussion; this conversation has been moved to chat.
    – Mark Mayo
    Commented May 7, 2019 at 9:19
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Flight is waste, and extra weight matters

Coarse rule of thumb, by deciding to fly, total fuel weight divided by total pax weight is attributable to you*. That's a lot - it's your own weight in fuel, and probably quite a bit more.

As far as possessions, this isn't a train. Every gram of additional weight adds to induced drag which adds to fuel burn. This isn't quite as bad, but still, on a 10,000km flight, every 1 gram of possessions puts roughly 1 gram of CO2 into the air.**

If you bring a 20g metal fork, you just addded 20g of CO2 into the atmosphere. That's worse than a 3g plastic fork and 3g of CO2 (the fork is also made of petroleum). And they won't know not to load a packaged meal for you, so they'll load it on the airplane anyway; that means the weight of your own meal is added to the fuel burn that will happen in any case.

Burning petroleum is worse than making packaging out of it and burying it in a landfill. Landfill is a kind of carbon capture, though certainly not a preferable one. When you landfill a petroleum product, it's a wash - it doesn't convert to CO2 since it doesn't burn. So that 3g fork makes 3g of CO2 if it's buried, or 12g if it's incinerated.

Also, refusing the meal is unlikely to result in any environmental savings. The logic is "they'll save it and serve it to someone else on a future flight" - not likely if it's heated/prepared, since it can't be heated twice (based on how aircraft galleys work; they're ovens not microwaves). Anyway, due to biocontrols it'll probably be destroyed at the destination.

Mind you, it also had to be grown in the first place, so you have all the CO2 load of factory farming to boot.

So you're actually doing worse by bringing your own food. (unless that's dietarily important; yet another factor to balance.)

If you do bring your own food, focus on lightweight packaging even if it is throwaway. My "go-to" is Ziploc bags. Better to make 1g of CO2 for a 1g ziploc bag, than 100g CO2 for 100g of quality tupperware. Twice since I assume you'll bring it back.

Look at it a different way

Keep in mind, Big Minds are already working on the environmental-waste-of-aviation problem. It's not as simple as "Disposable packaging bad", and it's a mistake to think "nothing is being done". It's more complicated and subtle than that, especially when you start thinking of the damage of poor biocontrols, e.g. disease, invasive species, that kind of thing.

Speaking of that: Luggage. Again, since your "stuff" takes fuel burn, make your luggage as light as possible. Don't bring consumables that are readily available at your destination. That's another "balance of priorities": re-buy something you already own, or spend 3x its weight in CO2 bringing it with you.

Speaking of that: You. Every pound of you that you leave at the gym is a pound of fuel not burned. Also hit the airport bathroom before the flight; waste is not ejected; it is stored in holding tanks.

Distance matters

Because of the "tyranny of the rocket equation" - airplanes get better fuel economy as their tanks empty out. Their fuel economy is worst at takeoff when they are heavy with fuel - in fact they are unable to climb to the most efficient high altitudes until they burn off some fuel. Longer flights have worse fuel economy than shorter ones. And yes, it matters, because they don't "top up", they depart with only the fuel they need.

The gory math of whether "muliple short hops" is better (taxi, takeoff and climb-out costs a lot of fuel also, so maybe not), or whether straight-thru flight is better or worse than electric HSR - is too much for this answer, but it's a place to look.

A sidebar: Waste-stream recycling is a thing

Recycling from intercontinental jetliners is weird, because of biocontrols. But to speak of recycling generally -- Recycling efforts are already made on waste streams. Metals are separated by magnets or eddy currents; and laborers pick out cardboard, sacks of newspapers and grabbable plastics. Many cities have found it's cheaper to have one waste stream and have machines/laborers separate recycling, than to have citizens have multiple waste cans.

Cities keep the blue bins due to citizen pressure/guilt, but it still needs to be picked through because people put lots of stupid stuff in the recycle bins. The upshot is, the "blue bins" are often "recycling theater", and actual recycling occurs farther down the waste stream. Likely so if your destination is an eco-minded place like western Europe or the usual coastal ports of entry in the US. So the recycling may be happening even if it is not apparent!



* You decided to fly, and that makes you responsible for your share of the airplane's weight, the fuel, and the fuel to fly the fuel. Just to throw a number out: An A380 carries 81,890 gallons of fuel. Say it's super-tight all-economy, seating 819 passengers (makes the math easy). Each passenger burns 100 gallons of fuel. Fuel weight 6.8 lbs/gal. so 680 pounds of gas. That's worst-case, but on a rather efficient bird. So I am very comfortable with "your own weight in fuel". However since possessions and bodymass are incremental, we look at those differently.

** Based on a comment that every extra kg of payload requires 0.2l of fuel (nearly 0.2kg) for a 6000km flight, and 1g of fuel makes 3g of CO2, so 0.6kg. I am stretching that to a 10,000km flight and it rounds to 1kg/1kg. Mind you Jet A is about 15% lighter than 1kg/1l, except the tyranny of the rocket equation makes the fuel burn probably 15% worse, so I'm calling that a wash.

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    It is only upon second reading that I also felt like it had elements of sarcasm and some stretch arguments. That said, the snarkiest and most trivializing answer has the highest votes and follow-up comment upvotes! Go figure! That said, this answer does have truth (recycling, for ex). And that said, I still don't agree with landfill causing equal damage or with buying more things (ref: dumped clothes, items). By using the same cup or cutlery you're helping and if done by everyone will certainly help. In a more formal way, writing to the airlines will also send them a msg. Commented May 7, 2019 at 5:28
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    @Phill Peak oil & climate change probably are the biggest challenges mankind has ever faced. I find this answer actually very restrained considering the environmental impact of civil aviation. There are very few people on earth who really need to fly. Commented May 7, 2019 at 7:21
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    I have just come to the conclusion that the greenest thing you can do after minimizing your baggage weight is to go to the toilet in the departure lounge just before boarding in order to to unload as much, er, waste as possible. Think of it as jet fuel not burned.
    – nigel222
    Commented May 7, 2019 at 11:10
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    This is the most ridiculous post I've read on SE. Arguing with CO2 consumption against taking a 20g spoon to the flight, or against tupperware, which endures for years and saves so much plastic! Really?? Look: Airbus A380 takes up to 555 passengers and weights 277 tones empty. That's 499 kg per person, Say you weight 70 kg and 15kg luggage, that's 584 kg flying just for you. So 20g spoon is like 0.003% of your total footprint. Let alone it will save Earth from stupid single-use plastic spoon. You guys really need to think twice before supporting such misleading arguments.
    – Tomas
    Commented May 7, 2019 at 12:19
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    @Tomas I've gone into more gory details, but you're missing a couple things. First, it won't save Earth from a single-use spoon because it's already on the airplane and assigned to you and can't be reused because galleys do not work that way. Second, due to induced drag, increments do matter and do have a cost. If your greater meaning is that "flying is so bad that a 20g spoon won't fix it", conceded, but one should not then decide to "go all-in" on eco-villainry. And that said, it may still be worth resisting plastic forks and plastic food for other reasons. Commented May 7, 2019 at 15:11
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The only way would be to refuse the food package, as they always come prepacked with the cutlery and other items you may not want from the packaging facility.

SOME airlines may still offer reusable cutlery that's washed and used again on another flight, most no longer do because of the higher weight, cost of ferrying the stuff around the world, cost of separating and cleaning it, etc. etc. (and the extra pollution caused by all that, which is often overlooked by those who're opposed to disposables).

Anecdotal, but related, to that last: my father was a financial consultant to the dairy industry. In the 1980s when cartons first became available for dairy products there was concern about the increased amount of waste that'd produce. He ordered a university to do an end to end study of the total environmental impact (including production, transport, disposal, and cleaning of everything involved) and the study concluded that the cartons would overall give a slightly smaller environmental impact than glass bottles, using the then-available historical data on the number of times those bottles could be reused. The financial cost of cartons also was going to be quite a bit lower because of the cost of returning bottles to the factories for cleaning and refilling, which is higher than the cost of shipping in new cartons. This was unexpected, but helped convince the industry that cartons were the way to go.

A similar study for cutlery for airlines would quite possibly show a similar result (though probably a smaller difference as the weight difference between plastic and aluminium cutlery is rather small).

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    This is an important point. If you replace the disposable items with heavier reusable ones then you may waste more fuel instead and harm the environment even more. I have also seen studies that if you are going to transport drinks a long way then disposable plastic consumes fewer resources than reusable glass because it is so much lighter. The answer in that case is to buy locally made drinks in reusable bottles.
    – badjohn
    Commented May 6, 2019 at 6:45
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    The financial cost of cartons also was going to be quite a bit lower because of the cost of returning bottles to the factories for cleaning and refilling Yes, of course, we know that single use plastics are cheaper, that's why they are widely in use. The problem is the externalities, namely that plastic is more difficult to recycle and extremely slow to degrade.
    – MJeffryes
    Commented May 6, 2019 at 9:14
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    Exactly, MJeffryes is right about the externalities. Currently the cost of shipping in new cartons is smaller than the cost of returning and refilling because the industry is under no obligation to pay for clearing-out the waste created by their packaging. If all governments everywhere would mandate that it's the producer's responsibility to clear the waste, then the cost of return and reuse would be lower for the producer than the cost of paying for new cartons and collecting them and recycling them. Commented May 6, 2019 at 9:44
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    @Redbaron No, burning PE plastics will not create any noxious gases. Most single use plastic is made of PE or PPE.
    – Stian
    Commented May 6, 2019 at 10:54
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    "refuse the food package" They carry the right number of everything for the number of passengers, so anything you don't use gets thrown out anyway.
    – RedSonja
    Commented May 6, 2019 at 12:02
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Laudable as minimising waste on a flight might be, taking the flight create orders of magnitude more environmental damage than the little bit you're trying to mitigate. Greenwash what you do in the cabin if it makes you feel better, but please don't fool yourself that you're doing anything remotely useful by it. You could produce a many decade-fold better result by not taking the trip.

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    Probably closer to several 1000 times better if we use @Harper's ballpark number of 680 pounds of CO2 generated per passenger.
    – SamYonnou
    Commented May 7, 2019 at 20:09
  • @SamYonnou Probably. I didn't want to reuse the phrase 'orders of magnitude', and for a PIDOOMA, 1000 sounded a bit much, but I have a thesaurus.
    – Neil_UK
    Commented May 8, 2019 at 6:21
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    This does not really answer the question about how to reduce waste. It is better off as a comment.
    – RedBaron
    Commented May 8, 2019 at 7:48
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    @RedBaron While me not answering the question about how to reduce waste might seem to be a problem, the real problem is that 8 billion people can't answer the question about how to reduce waste. There are even more orders of magnitude between one and eight billion than the several between a set of plastic cutlery and one passenger's worth of transatlantic fuel.
    – Neil_UK
    Commented May 9, 2019 at 12:56
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    @Neil_UK Please don't take this personally. You are an established member of StackExchange so you know how the site works. "Answers" must provide an answer to the question, any observations about why question is wrong belong to comments.
    – RedBaron
    Commented May 9, 2019 at 13:02
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Throwing your waste into the bin/bag offered by the flight attendant is not mandatory unless the destination country has a strict biosecurity policy. If you care to that level about selective waste disposal the best thing you can do is to use on of the wrapping bags (or have one prepared yourself earlier), separate recyclable items and packaging from the general waste, put those into your bag and pick it with you out of the plane. Once on the airport you should find selective waste bins where you can dispose your recyclable waste accordingly.

If you're not sure if this is allowed on a specific flight, consult a flight attendant.

BTW you inspired me to do the same on my future flights.

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    Garbage on international flights is usually regulated (in the US regulations, it's literally called "regulated garbage") and must be disposed of properly to comply with the law and avoid the spread of pests. Some airports have on site incinerators for this purpose. Taking the trash with you may not be legal. IATA has an initiative to reform these reuglations to allow for more recycling. Commented May 6, 2019 at 19:14
  • @ZachLipton fair point. I've travelled mostly within EU where such restrictions do not exists but for the long-haul this may not be option. It's worth checking first what is the policy in the country to which we travel. In some cases the limitation is only regarding organic products so plastic is excluded from that. In other cases as you mention it can refer to literally everything in which case there is nothing we can do from the garbage perspective. I'll edit my answer accordingly.
    – Ister
    Commented May 7, 2019 at 9:58
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In case of international flights, the amount of waste you will generate is pretty much defined the moment you buy the ticket. If the destination of your flight has strict biosecurity regulations (such as Australia, New Zealand, Europe and the US), everything you even may have touched will be destroyed: "literally everything — even a can of coke that has not been opened".

So if you want to reduce the amount of waste generated by your travel, you should research airline eco-friendliness upfront, since your behavior during the flight will have little impact on waste production, barring deliberately wasteful behavior.

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  • Europe has no such regulations, man... I am from EU and I have never been checked so strictly when coming back home from outside the EU.
    – Tomas
    Commented May 6, 2019 at 12:30
  • @Tomas I'm pretty sure as a passenger you can sneak a used plastic cup in Australia as well. BTW this made me think: if the OP is familiar with the waste disposal in the country of arrival, maybe they can take their waste with them and dispose of it properly themselves. Commented May 6, 2019 at 12:54
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I've previously worked for one of the very big company that prepares all the food and drinks trolleys for flights, and I can safety say that very little you do personally will reduce the waste produced by the flight.

The food carts are not prepared by the airlines. They are a subcontracted service. The number of meals (plus extras) are prepared based on the passenger manifest several hours before takeoff. Special dietary requirements are taken into account, but a full service will be packed for every ticketed passenger plus a few more to account for losses/changes. A meal will be there if your ticket includes it. People change their minds all the time so better to have one and not need it than not have one and end up with a passenger making a scene.

The crew - who are principally there for your safety and not to serve you food and drinks - will dish out the meals. If you decline, it will stay in the cart. But it isn't their job to sort waste. They have limited time and space. They will collect up everything and pack it back into the carts, stowed away safely in case something goes wrong.

When your flight lands, the carts - now full of waste - will be collected by the contracted company. All cooked food will be disposed of touched or not. Anything that has been opened (including that $100 box of chocolates in first class that no one touched), or anything that has been in any way marked (like wine and champagne bottle labels stained from spills) will be disposed of. The contracting company cannot reuse it. Basically, the only thing that is reused between flights are canned drinks. Fundamentally, it was already paid for by the airline anyway.

The best thing you can personally do is to reduce your own travel weight. Physics doesn't care about economics. The heavier the plane, the greater the lift needed to keep it in the air, and the more fuel needed to generate the lift. The only way to reduce this is to travel as light as you can.

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  • Thank you for this insight, I was hoping someone from behind the scenes would weigh in
    – Bamboo
    Commented May 8, 2019 at 0:23
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An out of the box option

Whilst most answers here have addressed what to take or not take on a flight, I have a more abstract solution to the problem of reducing waste on the flight, one with much larger gains.

Take a notebook and pen (if at all possible), and then carefully observe for practices on airline flights you take that you consider to be wasteful (inversely, observe what other airlines do right). Different airlines are bound to use different approaches regarding waste. Some will have better policies than others - so if you're not an 'ideas person', you can at least suggest the good policies from one airline, to another one that hasn't yet implemented it.

What you effectively do is document suggestions for improvements and send those suggestions to the respective airline(s) [either via letter, or email if you're able to find a suitable address]. If the suggestion(s) are successful, you'd be reducing waste on all flights, and not merely for yourself on your own.

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My first reaction ss for plastic cutlery- order a business class ticket or better, they are usually serving food on real ceramic plates with steel cutlery and non plastic glasses.

But then I checked the Flight Carbon Emissions Calculator for a long haul flight and got that it uses around 0.5 ton per person per direction for economy class and double that for better classes- I suppose that due to the lower density of passengers on a plane

Comparing that to the average European co2 footprint which is somewhere around 7 tons per person per year, it means that your flight wastes 52 days of carbon footprint of an average European, and on business you will waste 104 days !

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    Thank you for the links. I think it is very important to put this in the context of an individuals personal carbon budget.
    – Bamboo
    Commented May 7, 2019 at 4:05
  • +1 for being the only answer mentioning upgrading a ticket for finer cutlery. If plastic cutlery is your big hang up, then first class all the way!
    – AussieJoe
    Commented Jul 1, 2019 at 20:12
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I remember some companies advertising that they recycle their waste, but information about that is hard to get. You could mail them and ask, and then choose to fly with those companies.

Note that by asking them you also send a signal.

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    I have noticed that KLM does split the waste at the end of food service, ready for recycling. I have only done short flights recently.
    – Willeke
    Commented May 6, 2019 at 10:07
  • @Willeke I think many airlines do that. It costs money to process garbage, but some garbage makes money (e.g. old paper or specific plastics) when they separate that, it'll cost them less to process it. It might also be required by law in some countries (not sure about the full extent).
    – JJJ
    Commented May 7, 2019 at 20:06
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Bring your own food to the plane :-) This is the food I prepared for my February flight to India :-) It's all vegan and raw, very rich and tasty. Avocado, brocoli, pickled cabbage, paprika, olive oil, soya sauce, lemon. Maybe I put some tahini as well. I made it very quickly, just 10 minutes before leaving. I can't stand the plane food - it's artificial, super processed food with lot of sugar and chemical preservatives. On the contrary, food like this one is quick, fresh, full of enzymes. It will make you feel satiated and fresh :-)

I use good plastic box and my own spoon. I also take my 1L water bottle with me, and I just get it re-filled.

I also bring my own headphones and my own blanket from Cashmere :-) (these are the items that usualy go with plastic in the plane).

This way I literally waste zero plastic on the plane :)

enter image description here

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    @CrossRoads iata.org/whatwedo/ops-infra/baggage/Pages/check-bag.aspx "Security regulations limit the amount of liquids aerosols and gels permitted in carry-on baggage." BUT food is both not a liquid and subject to an exception: " Medications, baby milk/foods, special dietary requirements are exempt."
    – HBruijn
    Commented May 6, 2019 at 14:05
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    @CrossRoads There's nothing liquid in there, that's why. Stupid arbitrary rule, of course, but that's how it works. Commented May 6, 2019 at 14:06
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    That looks really good and it's exactly the right idea: reusable containers, etc. But just declining the airline food won't help, because even unused it'll probably go into the waste stream. The OP should book a ticket class that won't offer any kind of cabin service that would require disposable containers or cutlery. If we can assume beverage cans are recycled (probably not universally true) then it'd be safe to buy a soft drink or a beer, if it can be had in the can, without a plastic cup.
    – CCTO
    Commented May 6, 2019 at 20:53
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    You actually can take as much liquids as you like onto the plane. You just can't bring them through security. However, it is fine to re-fill your water bottle at the bathroom (some US airports even have fountains after security for that purpose). You could also buy coffee with your own (sealable) cup, take drinks from the airport lounge, or bring any drinks bought at the departure gate after security.
    – averell
    Commented May 7, 2019 at 6:41
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    It's not so simple. As already mentioned by others in the comments whatever you bring on the plane increases the weight of the plane significantly contributing/impacting the fuel consumption. You are not really limiting plastic waste (as already mentioned the plastic will be on-board based on the number of passengers and if not used it will most probably be simply dumped after the flight) but you increase the CO2 footprint instead.
    – Ister
    Commented May 7, 2019 at 10:04
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There are a lot of replies to this question and there are bits of an answer spread all over, but the discussion has been dominated by CO2 emissions, rather than addressing the question asked. I'm going to collect the valuable information here and add in some of my own research. Please feel free to improve this answer, it is a community wiki (but you don't need to add any more about CO2, there are already very well thought out answers that do this).

TL;DR

The best options for reducing your in-flight waste are to use a budget airline with no in-flight service, or declaring days in advance of your flight that you don't want an in-flight meal on a full-service airline. If waste minimisation is a concern, you should first address the huge CO2 emission cost first, and seriously considering not taking the flight in the first place.

CO2

First and foremost, the largest environmental concern in taking a flight is the CO2 emissions. Using the link provided by Rsf, a 10 hour flight could produce in the order of 900kg of CO2, a significant chunk of the average yearly carbon footprint of a single person. But for the sake of answering the question, we're only going to look at in-flight waste. Perhaps a large CO2 offset has been purchased to try and mitigate emissions, or perhaps an individual is tracking a CO2 budget and has accounted for the flight. If you are not at least doing this, then waste minimisation will make a comparatively tiny impact on the environmental cost of your flight.

Waste

According to IATA (thanks Zach Lipton for the link) a typical passenger on average creates 1.43kg of waste, of which 40% is food and plastic waste (~0.6kg). This is averaged across all flights, so presumably long haul flights will have more waste, and potentially a larger proportion of that will be food and plastic waste. So where does this waste come from, and what can we do?

Snacks and miscellaneous

For small service items, like drinks, peanuts etc. the simple option is to refuse. Peanuts will keep, and so will the cups, cans, bottles etc. etc. to be passed onto the next person. (To counter the anticipated "but it's going to be used anyway", the overall demand will be reduced, hence the airline won't purchase as much). For other things that might come in plastic, again you can just refuse to use them and leave them as they are. Be aware though that sometimes blankets can be wrapped in plastic, so if you think you'll need one, you might have to wear an extra layer just in case.

In-flight meals

For things like the in-flight meals, it becomes a bit trickier. If you haven't planned ahead, then the moment the tray lands on your table is probably too late to do much about it. In fact, according to Dan, your trays are packed several hours before you even board the flight. What happens to the waste afterwards is in the hands of the contractor, and if you don't use something from your tray, there is a strong likelihood it will be discarded anyway.

The link provided by Dmitry Grigoryev suggests that in some countries, anything you touch on international flights will be incinerated for biosecurity reasons (although there is a push to temper these laws). However, if you aren't landing in one of these countries, or your flight is domestic, some of your plastic might be reused. To quote this news report from 2010: "Air New Zealand says its plastic utensils, including cutlery, trays, bowls, cups and plates, are sorted by staff for cleaning and reuse following international flights", although it doesn't specify if this is light plastic or not. It also mentions that plastic cutlery on some airlines is actually being sterilised and reused upto 10 times, and potentially as many as 30 times. Using it and returning it to the staff could be a reasonable option if you know the airline does this.

If you are unaware of how the airline handles used plastic cutlery, or you know they definitely throw it out, then the moment you receive the tray you should assume everything goes to waste. In fact, if you don't say anything before your flight, then there is probably already a meal set aside for you, on a tray, ready to go.

Plan ahead

As noted by averell, budget airlines are often forgoing the traditional in-flight service, in favour of a "buy in advance" model (to coin a phrase). Choosing these airlines will allow you to virtually eliminate your in-flight waste by eating a sufficient meal before boarding, or preparing a light meal to take on board. If you are flying a full cost airline, then you usually have an option to specify your meal (people with dietary requirements will be well aware of this). In some cases you can request "no meal" and do the same as above.

If you take this route, then weight minimisation is something you should also consider, but you should be accounting for the upper limit of your CO2 emissions in your offset/budget anyway.

What impact will this have?

In exact terms, minimising your in-flight waste might impact your own personal environmental cost, but on the scale of the flight you take, the impact will be tiny. But this is true of almost any action a person takes in any sphere. The value of this comes from the message sent to the airlines about what their customers care about. As Harper points out, this is an issue with the entire system and requires ingenuity from a top level. SSight3 suggests documenting good practices you observe and passing them on to other airlines. But there is a lot going on behind the scenes that regular passengers simply won't see. Perhaps the best option is making sure airlines know that in-flight waste is a concern but telling them directly, perhaps through customer complaint channels. Again, the biggest environmental impact you can have is from not taking the flight in the first place.

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  • I was going to thank you for answering while letting sense prevail! Then I saw you are the OP! Well, please mark this as an accepted answer. Answers that either say 'flying is optional' or 'you might as well use more cups because someone else will use them' are like 'breathing is optional. Practice yoga to be more efficient in using oxygen' and 'you got a papercut? might as well cut yourself at 5 other places because eventually you'll get injured somewhere anyway'. Commented May 7, 2019 at 17:38
  • @perennial_noob those comparisons make no sense at all. Your cutting example is the opposite of what's happening here. If you're going to cut yourself all over, then that one papercut isn't going to make a difference.
    – JJJ
    Commented May 7, 2019 at 18:34
  • @JJJ You addressed a point I didn't make. The papercut analogy was for 'you might as well use more cups because someone else will use them'. Also, let's say I am hurt in a bunch of places (not self-inflicted), I still don't know if I will love to go get cut in another place that I can avoid (self-inflicted). Equating an individual's choice/action of flying to 'cut yourself all over' is something I don't agree with because that can easily spiral down to living in the stone age to avoid emissions. Perspective (scale) is important but not if the main conclusion is to continue destroying. Commented May 7, 2019 at 18:58
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    @perennial_noob the pain example is different from the environment one because emissions are put out there and it doesn't matter if you throw away the cup or I do (assuming we don't both do it). It might matter who gets the paper cut (maybe you don't like it while I don't care). That being said, it's much easier to save more on big things than it is on little things. In terms of carbon (and maybe not other things), eating less beef (meat) may have more of an impact. Of course both is better, but every kg of CO2 is one (regardless of where you reduced the impact).
    – JJJ
    Commented May 7, 2019 at 19:06
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    Sure, but burning CO2 is not the only problem here, IMO. Every discrete piece of trash is thrown into landfill or into the oceans (indirectly). The kind of impact either of them have is different. Even for recapture of CO2, there are studies and prototypes that have demonstrated that CO2 from atmosphere has been captured easier than cleaning up oceans or methane/greenhouse gases coming out of landfills. Independent problems to solve, right? Commented May 7, 2019 at 19:11
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The easiest option is to politely refuse the in-flight service and to bring your own food and drink, with spoon and fork if required.

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    I do hope the airline doesn’t throw away unopened food items. Try to order the flight without food and drink.
    – Michael
    Commented May 6, 2019 at 10:03
  • @Michael As the link in my answer suggests, it may well be the case, at least on some international flights. Commented May 6, 2019 at 12:58
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    Good luck getting through security with your packed lunch. Anything gooey like stew or soup or yogurt will fall into the category of fluid. As for cutlery - you might be ok with a teaspoon, but don't even think about a knife and fork. Commented May 6, 2019 at 13:40
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    I've already put this in another comment above, but it's more to the point here: just refusing service won't help, because it'll still go into the waste stream. The OP needs to book a service class that doesn't offer packaged meals.
    – CCTO
    Commented May 6, 2019 at 20:55
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    @DmitryGrigoryev It's true on all flights. Hot food is loaded frozen then heated in ovens. You can't refreeze it especially considering food safety and quality issues. Cold food has food safety issues, once its taken out of refrigerated containers to serve, it has to be eaten or discarded because bacteria starts to grow.
    – user71659
    Commented May 7, 2019 at 6:50
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Bring your own mug and ask them to pour drinks in that. Other answers suggest to bring your own food and drink, but as pointed out by others, that's not really helping anyone for a variety of reasons.

The mug on the other hand will replace plastic cups which would otherwise be used by you. Those unused cups will just stay on the plane and will be used for future customers (as opposed to the food that will go off and thrown away).

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    Based on numbers and arguments in the other answers, it looks like the extra fuel burn from flying with a mug can easily outweigh the environmental impact of producing and disposing of a plastic cup. Commented May 7, 2019 at 17:00
  • @HenningMakholm sure, but does it make one feel as good? The mug can be a conversation starter. Soon everyone will be flying with mugs. Airlines will feature their mugs (from the tax free catalogs) more prominently and in no-time everyone will be doing it. Mugolution! But yeah, in all seriousness, you're probably right.
    – JJJ
    Commented May 7, 2019 at 17:08
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    That kind of reuse still means that you are contributing to less trashing, right? Even if the plastic stays on and is used by another passenger, it is better. Otherwise as a passenger I might as well use 3 cups of water for every one drink of water. The impact in the immediate short term being lower is a different argument but since when did it become cool to consume without scruples because it won't make a difference? In fact the other way, airlines may budget to carry multiple cups per passenger because of this trend of consumption. Commented May 7, 2019 at 17:33
  • @perennial_noob I'd say so. The argument by others is that the weight of the cup means more fuel is used which in turn offsets any environmental benefits from not throwing away the cup. Note that I (and I assume others here too) haven't done the math on this.
    – JJJ
    Commented May 7, 2019 at 17:40
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    I wonder if they'd fill my 20-oz travel mug with orange juice instead of those little one-gulp plastic cups.. Commented May 7, 2019 at 23:59

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