Spot on. For this, only the bottle cap production changed, the bottling process for beverages hadn’t to be touched at all.
Comment on Euro bottles are so much better now
HobbitFoot@thelemmy.club 6 months agotheir budgets are SO extremely deep and large. And this cap? This cap is the best they could come up with?
You’re assuming that there was an expensive program to replace the entire bottling line and redesign the bottles in order to meet the EU regulation while achieving satisfactory user experience.
What likely happened is that the engineers in charge of the cap design were told to change as little as possible and came up with a design that only required changing the cap moulds. Everything else got to stay the same, saving the company’s budget for other things
tabloid@feddit.de 6 months ago
Hawk@lemmy.dbzer0.com 6 months ago
They didn’t even change the moulds. The caps are exactly the same in many cases, except they’re not cut the entire way around.
Seems a few bottles have better design, but I have not seen those myself.
barsoap@lemm.ee 6 months ago
Yes and no: The bottling lines don’t get replaced, and in fact the EU checked beforehand that they won’t need to be replaced because otherwise the whole thing might’ve been an undue burden on the industry and they would have to make a closer evaluation, give the industry more time to switch, etc. The new caps can be screwed on by the old machines and if not, only cheap parts need replacing.
OTOH bottle cap manufacturers very much did do their homework, or at least the ones producing good caps that beverage companies will buy did it as no beverage company wants to be the one with the awkward caps. That’s not to say that there’s not bad designs out there but those will vanish. Also some consumers seem to have skill issues, like not latching the cap into the open position.