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Refill is a British environmental campaign that connects people to places they can eat, drink and shop with less plastic. [1] Using a location based app, Refill provides a network of points offering the public free tap water in the UK. [2] The network comprises high street retailers, cafes, restaurants, other businesses, museums, and local ...
The casual, sit-down restaurant features a wide array of steaks, ribs, shrimp, and chicken dishes. Free refills are offered on lemonades, teas, and Coca-Cola products such as Sprite and Pibb Xtra.
Free refills are seen as a good way to attract customers to an establishment, especially one whose beverages are not their primary source of income. [1] Due to the extremely low cost of fountain soft drinks (especially the beverage itself, not including the cost of the cup, lid and straw), often offering a profit margin of 80-82%, establishments tend to offer free refills as a sales gimmick. [3]
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The announcement to eliminate self-serve drink stations and potentially charge for refills drew swift reaction on social media. "McDonald's made over $25 billion in profits this year, but they're ...
Smaller beer bottles (250 or 330 mL) carry a €0.10 deposit, and larger ones (750 mL or 1 L) a €0.20 one. Some fruit-juice bottles, such as those sold by Oxfam Wereldwinkels/Magasins du Monde, carry a €0.30 deposit. Some hard plastic milk and orange juice bottles such as those sold by Delhaize carry a €0.20 deposit.
We’re all guilty of refilling our plastic water bottles—but the consequences can be seriously harmful to your health.
Event schedule, 1998. In the 2000 edition, Fineberg discusses the work of Blake’s occasional collaborator, Ebon Fisher who lived half a block away on Grand Street. The historian moves from the invisible threads of community to the immateriality of the internet, leaving behind an impression that echoes Blakes and Traynor’s concerns about ...