Please do not take reusable coffee cups to a coffee shop during coronavirus pandemic

Keith Parkins
The Little Bicycle Coffee Shop
3 min readDec 23, 2020
contactless payment takeaway cups no resuable cups Coffee Aroma
contactless payment takeaway cups no reusable cups Coffee Aroma

Reusable coffee cups address symptoms takeaway cups not the underlying problem of grab it and go wanton consumerism.

Would treat a good red wine this way, then why coffee?

The only way to enjoy coffee is to slow down, sit and relax in a coffee shop drinking coffee served in glass or ceramic, coffee brewed by a skilled barista.

The world has been turned upside down by coronavirus, drinking in a coffee shop no longer possible, where open, often takeaway only, and if can find open, takeaway cups to reduce cross infection.

During coronavirus pandemic using a reusable coffee cup is an absolute no no. It is to introduce an unnecessary disease vector putting staff and clientele at risk.

No reputable coffee shop should be accepting reusable cups.

Takeaway cappuccino from Coffee Aroma. A model of how it should be. Only one person allowed into the coffee shop at a time, contactless payment only, takeaway cups a necessary evil, no reusable cups. No reusable cups accepted, anyone who tries will not be served and if persist will be asked to leave.

At the other end of the spectrum, Brian of Brian’s Coffee Spot going around coffee shops insisting they take his coffee cups, in one coffee shop he handed over two different coffee cups, then bragging on social media his cups accepted and encouraging others to do the same. Highly irresponsible behaviour.

A minority of coffee shops reusable coffee cups on sale. Why reusable cups on sale? If on sale customers will expect to be able to bring in reusable cups.

When I queried this, no one should be using reusable cups during coronavirus pandemic I was told if someone brings a reusable cup, they fill a takeaway cup, up to the customer to then fill their own reusable cup. Somewhat self-defeating.

Thermal efficiency irrelevant. If I order a coffee, it is to drink, not save for some time in the future.

If I were to use a reusable cup it would be a glass KeepCup or Huskee cup, the glass KeepCup has the bad habit of smashing to smithereens if dropped.

Huskee cup is a well designed cup, the lid an optional extra.

Huskee cup is an iconic design, with eco credentials of finding a use for the discarded husks from coffee beans, but and it is a very big but, it combines the husk which can be composted with plastic which can possibly be recycled and turns into a product which can be neither composted nor recycled and will at the end of its life end up in landfill or incineration.

I have never understood why anyone wishes to drink through a hole in a lid.

Not addressed by European Coffee Trip, reusable cups must be barista friendly, that is clean and not too tall will not fit the espresso machine.

If we wish to reduce the number of throwaway takeaway cups the answer is simple, sit in a coffee shop and relax with a cup of coffee, but whilst that is not possible during coronavirus pandemic, please do not take your reusable cup to a coffee shop.

Post pandemic, if wish to take ones own cup to a coffee shop to drink out of, then take an enamel mug.

Takeaway coffee cups are bad for people and planet. Lined with a plastic inner liner, difficult to recycle, micro-plastics leach into hot liquids. But takeaway coffee cups a necessary evil to slow the spread of covid-19, especially now we have a more infectious mutation that is spreading like wildfire.

Compostable coffee cups, how many actually end up on a compost heap?

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Keith Parkins
The Little Bicycle Coffee Shop

Writer, thinker, deep ecologist, social commentator, activist, enjoys music, literature and good food.