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August 28, 2008 11:06 AM PDT

The greenest lunch box

Posted by Thursday Bram

Most school lunches require plenty of packaging--there are brown bags, juice boxes, plastic baggies, and more. In a year, all that food packaging generates 67 pounds of trash per child, totaling 3.5 billion pounds. It's enough to make an environmentally-minded parent cringe.

The Lunchopolis Lunch Box means no more plastic bags.

(Credit: Lunchopolis)

But the Lunchopolis line of lunch boxes comes with four containers and a drinking bottle that are designed to be easy to reuse. The bottle, for instance, has a wider mouth than most bottles so that it's easy to pour in liquids and add ice cubes.

There's also a financial boon to packing a "garbage-free" lunch, as the Lunchopolis creators describe their innovation. You can buy lunch foods in bulk, and save on food, if you have an easy way to transport it. Even better, you don't have to pay for plastic baggies that are going to wind up in the trash after only a few hours in a lunch bag. The Lunchopolis lunch boxes are a little pricier than other lunch boxes, but their going to last through more than just one school year--unlike most of the plastic lunch boxes that are lucky to make it to December, let alone May.

The lunch boxes come in a bright green, pink polkadot, or water droplet pattern. They're insulated and guaranteed lead-free. Lunchopolis lunch bags are priced at $31.99.

Thursday Bram is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 1 comment
by climateaction August 31, 2008 11:10 AM PDT
I wouldn't bother to buy something "a little pricier than other lunch boxes" when we are already using a regular old lunchbox, plus reusaeable Tupperware or Glad plastic containers, and wax paper not plastic wrap; there really is no need for a product like this if you simply buy a lunch box, and use plastic containers. We should focus more on buying less, not creating something that is "green" - unnecessary goods are not green.
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