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Wikipedia

Drinking straw

A drinking straw is a utensil that is intended to carry the contents of a beverage to one's mouth. Disposable straws are commonly made from plastics. However, environmental concerns related to plastic pollution and new regulation have led to rise in reusable and biodegradable straws. Following a rise in regulation and public concern, some companies have even voluntarily banned or reduced the number of plastic straws used. Alternative straws are often made of reusable materials like silicone or metal or alternative disposable and biodegradable materials like paper, cardboard, pasta, or bamboo.

Plastic drinking straws with bellows segment

A straw is used by placing one end in one's mouth and the other in a beverage. By employing suction, the air pressure in one's mouth drops causing atmospheric pressure to force the liquid through the straw and into the mouth. Drinking straws can be straight or have an angle-adjustable bellows segment. Straws have been used since earliest recorded history, with the first extent straws dating from the 4th century BCE. Different traditional drinks and foods use straws designed for explicit purposes, such as the "straw and sieve" bombilla used to drink the mate infusion common to South America. Since the early 20th century, mass-production of straws from plastic and other industrial products such as cellophane has increased the widespread availability of disposable straws.

Though most straws are used by able-bodied peoples, they play an important role in food and drink access for people with physical disabilities that effect peoples ability to swallow, hold glassware, or carry the weight of drinks or other liquids.[1][2] Straws can also be an important part of both child and elderly care or in recovery from certain medical procedures such as dental work, making it safer and easier to consume liquids, though may not always be advisable depending on the health situation.[3][4]

History edit

Early examples edit

 
Ancient Egyptian painting, 18th dynasty, reign of Akhenaten (Amenophis IV), circa 1300 B.C.E. depicting use of an early form of drinking straw in beer-drinking. Egyptian Museum of Berlin

The first known straws were made by the Sumerians and were used for drinking beer,[5] probably to avoid the solid byproducts of fermentation that sink to the bottom.[6][7] The oldest drinking straw in existence, found in a Sumerian tomb dated 3,000 BCE, was a gold tube inlaid with the precious blue stone lapis lazuli.[5] Others claim metal ‘sceptres’ discovered in Armenia in 1897 and date to the Maykop culture (3700 to 2900 BCE) as the oldest surviving straws.[8][9]

 
A bombilla, a metal straw with a filter on the bottom, traditionally used for drinking mate

In the 1800s, the rye grass straw came into fashion because it was cheap and soft, but it had an unfortunate tendency to turn to mush when put in liquid.[5]

 
Marvin C. Stone

American Marvin C. Stone patented the modern drinking straw, 8+12 inches long[10] and made of paper, in 1888, to address the shortcomings of the rye grass straw.[11] He came upon the idea while drinking a mint julep on a hot day in Washington, D.C.;[12][13][14] the taste of the rye grass straw was mixing with the drink and giving it a grassy taste, which he found unsatisfactory.[5] He wound paper around a pencil to make a thin tube, slid out the pencil from one end, and applied glue between the strips.[5] He later refined it by building a machine that would coat the outside of the paper with wax to hold it together, so the glue would not dissolve in bourbon.[5][15][16][17][18][10][19][20]

Early paper straws had a narrow bore, to prevent seeds from clogging them.[10] It was common to use two of them, to reduce the effort needed to take each sip.[citation needed]

Mass production edit

Plastic straws became widespread following World War II. The materials used in their manufacture were inexpensive, and the types of restaurant fare that they accompanied had become more affordable and popular.[21]

In 1930, Otto W. Dieffenbach (Sr.) developed and produced a cellophane drinking straw in Baltimore MD. His company known as Glassips Inc. produced straws for restaurants and other products. One patent dates to 1954. The Sr. Mr. Dieffenbach served as chairman until 1972 and the business, then based in Towson MD. was sold in 1979.[22][23]

One of the first mass-produced twisted straw was Sip-N-See invented by Milton Dinhofer[24] who later came up with the idea and designs for the chimp in the iconic game, Barrel of Monkeys. Dinhofer originally patented his straw in the shape of a scissor with two loops on top,[25] but Macy's would not carry the straw unless it had a character on it. They suggested Dinhofer make three straws (eventually patented in 1950):[26] a cowboy, a clown and an animal for which he made an elephant. Each of his characters was attached to a looping soft polyethylene straw, and users were to sip from another detachable, small, straight, straw of acetate. Rexor Corp. copyrighted[27] the straw the same year, but Macy's decided not to carry them. Dinhofer first marketed the straws with Woolworths. The straws were sold in individual boxes, and more characters were eventually added.[28] Other buyers began to carry it, too, and it was marketed as an "action drinking toy."[29] Sip-N-See went on to sell approximately six million units, and, a decade later, the s-shape of the arms on the cowboy straw would inspire Dinhofer's monkey design for Barrel of Monkeys.

Types edit

Drinking straws come in many variations and are manufactured using a variety of materials.

Plastic edit

 
Plastic drinking straws in a container

The most common form of drinking straw is made of the thermoplastic polymer Polypropylene. This plastic is known for its durability, lightness, and ability to be manufactured at a low cost.[30] Other plastic polymers that exhibit these traits include polyethylene (PE) and polyvinyl chloride (PVC).[31]

These attributes are what have made the traditional plastic straw ubiquitous in fast food establishments and take-out orders around the world. Additionally, other advantages of plastic straws include their ability to be molded into different shapes and sizes while also being able to withstand a wide range of temperatures without deforming.[32] This is important because straws must be temperature resistant and thermally insulated because they can be used in both hot and cold beverages.

 
A pink articulated plastic straw in a drink

One interesting variation of the plastic straw is the "bendy straw", commonly referred to in the industry as an "articulated straw". This straw has a concertina-type hinge near its top to allow for improved maneuverability of the straw when drinking a beverage, especially from a low angle. The articulated straw was invented by Joseph Friedman in 1937.[5] He quickly developed the straw after he saw his daughter struggling to use a normal straight straw.[33]

 
An astronaut using a plastic straw in space on the 1998 NASA mission STS-95. Straws help reduce the likelihood that liquids will escape containment and contaminate equipment within space vessels. Specially designed straws and other drinking equipment, such as hydration packs can be used in high complexity environments where liquids can cause problems.

Another variation of the plastic straw, the “spoon straw”, has a spoon-like tip at the bottom, and is often used with iced slush beverages.[34]

"Stir straws" with a relatively short length and quite a narrow bore are often given along with disposable cups for preparing coffee or tea and serve the primary function of being able to stir in sugar, sweetener, cream, or non-dairy creamer, as well as allowing for sipping a hot beverage. Additionally, boba tea plastic straws with wider openings are commonly used to drink bubble tea, to better accommodate its characteristic tapioca pearls. The tip of these straws is often cut at an angle creating a point which allows one to use the straw to puncture the plastic cover of bubble tea drinks.[35]

Plastic straws can also be embellished with some forms marketed as "crazy straws", having a number of twists and turns at the top. These straws are often marketed and can be entertaining for young children.[36][37] The crazy straw was invented by Arthur Philip Gildersleeve and patented in 1936.[38]

Reusable edit

 
A reusable metal straw with a silicone tip

Environmental concerns, stemming from the impact plastic waste has had on the ocean, have led to a rise in reusable straws.[39][40] Reusable straws are primarily being manufactured out of Polylactic acid (PLA),[41] silicone, and metal.[42] Polylactic acid and silicone straws are the most similar in texture and feel to their plastic counterparts, however, they fit into the category of biodegradable polymers. These types of straws have some benefits over other more ecologically conscious straws because they are resistant to disintegrating in one's drink and provide adequate insulation for hot and cold drinks.[39] One manufacturer of silicon straws even claims that their straws can be burned into biodegradable ash.[40]

Metal and glass straws are other reusable alternatives. A "vampire straw" is a large metal drinking straw with a pointed tip that allows it to double as a dagger-like weapon. A man was arrested at Boston Logan International Airport after a vampire straw was confiscated from his carry-on luggage.[43]

Bombilla edit

 
Two stamped 800 silver bombillas with gold plated heads and removable filters. The filter in the middle of the picture is detached from the bombilla tube at the bottom of the picture and is shown in the open position which is used for cleaning the filter. Once the filter is folded, the two semicircular filter threads form a circular threaded neck allowing the filter to screw into the tube. The bombilla tubes are decorated.

A bombilla (Spanish), bomba (Portuguese) or massasa (Arabic) is a type of drinking straw, used to drink mate.[44] In metal bombillas, the lower end is perforated and acts as a metal filter which is used to separate the mate infusion from leaves, stems, and other mate debris, and functions in a similar fashion to the perforated metal screen of a teapot.[45] Filters can be removable and can be opened for cleaning, or they may be permanently fixed to the bombilla stem. Bombillas vary in length but a popular length is approximately 7 inches (18 cm) long.[46]

Traditional bombillas are made of metal alloys such as an alloy of copper and nickel called alpaca silver or German silver, stainless steel, and 800 silver which is used to construct the filter and stem, sometimes combined with a gold plated head. Low-end bombillas are made from hollow-stemmed cane. Silver bombillas are popular.[47] In recent times, the traditional silver bombillas are being replaced by ones made from stainless steel.[48]

Silver bombillas were used by the privileged classes, while those made of straw were used by people of lesser means.[45] Due to the high thermal conductivity of silver, bombillas and gourds made of silver can get very hot fast, requiring caution when drinking hot mate tea to avoid burns.[47][49]

Single-use edit

Some companies such as Starbucks have moved away from plastic straws.[50] Bamboo straws are sometimes made from the moso bamboo tree (Phyllostachys edulis).[51]

Some companies such as McDonald's have switched to paper and paperboard straws.[41] There are some innovation companies that try to introduce alternative to plastic straws such as Drinking-Straw that are made out of wheat, grass or reed.

Edible edit

Edible straws have been made out of materials like rice, seaweed, rye,[52] and confectioneries (such as candy).[53][54][55]

Flavor straws are a form of drinking straw with a flavoring included, designed to make drinking milk more pleasant for children. They first marketed in the United States in 1956 as Flav-R-Straws.[56] Newer variations of the original idea have been resurrected in forms such as Sipahhs, and Magic Milk Straws that contain hundreds of flavored pellets encased within a stiff plastic straw.

Environmental impact edit

 
A pink heart-shaped plastic straw

Plastic drinking straw production contributes a small amount to petroleum consumption, and the used straws become a small part of global plastic pollution when discarded, most after a single use.[57]

Plastic straws are not widely recycled and may continue to pollute various aspects of the environment, including bodies of water and streets due to their lack of proper disposal.[58]

The image of a plastic straw lodged into the nostril of a sea turtle, filmed by marine biologist Christine Figgener, quickly spread across all forms of media and spurred the elevation of awareness regarding the potential danger of plastic straws for marine life.[31] The scientist who uploaded the video remarks that it is the emotional pull of the imagery, rather than the significance of the plastic straw itself in the plastic debacle, that garnered such high viewership.[59]

Quantity edit

One anti-straw advocacy group has estimated that about 500 million straws are used daily in the United States alone – an average 1.6 straws per capita per day.[60][61][62] This statistic has been criticized as inaccurate, because it was approximated by Milo Cress, who was nine years old at the time, after surveying straw manufacturers[63][64] to ask their estimates of the total, which he then averaged.[65] (Further details are unavailable as "being 9, he had not thought to document the process closely."[65][66]) This figure has been widely cited by major news organizations.[65] Market research firm Freedonia Group estimated the number to be 390 million.[65] Another market research firm Technomic estimated the number to be 170 million, although this number excludes some types of straws.[65]

Plastic straws amounted to 5–7.5% of all waste collected from beaches during the 2017 International Cleanup Event, conducted by Ocean Conservancy, making it a minor contamination source, yet considered easy to avoid.[31] In total, they are less than 0.022% of plastic waste emitted to oceans.[67]

Microplastics edit

Microplastics pollution is a concern if plastic waste is improperly dumped.[68] If plastic straws are improperly disposed of, they can be transported via water into soil ecosystems, and others, where they break down into smaller, more hazardous pieces than the original plastic straw.[68]

Water can break down plastic waste into microplastic and nanoplastic particles.[31] These particles are capable of transmitting harmful substances or can themselves prove dangerous, as they have been shown to negatively affect the surrounding environment.[31]

Alternatives edit

 
Paper drinking straws

Alternatives to plastic straws, some reusable, exist, although they are not always readily available, or deemed to be of sufficient quality for all users (including, in particular, those with a disability). Paper straws have proliferated as a popular alternative, although they are prone to losing their rigidity when soaked inside a beverage, and in some cases are not durable enough for thicker beverages such as milkshakes. Metal straws are more durable, but they are incapable of being bent, can damage teeth or lacerate children or kill adults during falls,[69] and some restaurants have reported them as a target of theft.[70][71][72][73]

Some critics have argued that paper and metal alternatives are no more environmentally-friendly than plastic, citing the environmental impacts of paper and mining, and that paper straws would likely end up in landfills and not be composted.[70][74] In August 2019, after deploying paper straws in the United Kingdom, McDonald's stated that its straws could not actually be recycled at present, since their thickness "makes it difficult for them to be processed by our waste solution providers". The chain stated that they went towards energy production, and not to landfills.[74][70][75]

Polylactic acid (PLA), a biodegradable plastic, requires 69% fewer fossil fuel resources to produce than plastic, but it requires very specific conditions to break down fully.[76] Polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA), derived from plant oil, is marine biodegradable. In 2021, the manufacturing company Wincup was distributing a PHA product branded as "the Phade straw."[77]

As of 2021 several eco-friendly alternative materials have been tried. Among them are hay straws, bamboo straws, seaweed straws, and straws made from naturally dried fallen coconut leaves.[78]

Greenwashing edit

Not all attempts to be more environmentally friendly are in earnest, though. In an attempt to artificially boost sales, some groups have been guilty of "greenwashing," or falsely marketing their products as a viable environmentally friendly alternative, when it is actually just as harmful to the environment, or worse.[31] These marketing tactics draw in well-meaning consumers who believe they are helping the environment (often by paying more for a product), when they are instead encouraging these misleading strategies.[31]

To combat this scheme, TerraChoice, an America-based advertising company, crafted a rubric to calculate the amount of greenwashing prevalent in a product.[31] They determined that 95% of products they surveyed at American and Canadian stores are guilty of at least one act of greenwashing.[31]

Plastic straw bans and proposals edit

In the late-2010s, a movement towards laws banning or otherwise restricting the use of plastic straws and other single-use plastics emerged. Environmental groups have encouraged consumers to object to "forced" inclusion of plastic straws with food service.[79][80] The movement followed the discovery of plastic particles in oceanic garbage patches and larger plastic waste-reduction efforts that focused on banning plastic bags in some jurisdictions. It has been intensified by viral videos, including one of a plastic straw being removed from a sea turtle's nostril by biologist Nathan J. Robinson and filmed by marine biologist and activist Christine Figgener.[81][59]

By country edit

Australia edit

A single-use plastic ban was introduced in the state of South Australia in 2020.[52] Fast food chain McDonald's promised to phase out plastic straws throughout Australia by 2020.[52]

Brazil edit

On 5 July 2018, the city of Rio de Janeiro became the first state capital of Brazil to forbid the distribution of plastic straws,[82][83] "forcing restaurants, coffee shops, bars and the like, beach huts and hawkers of the municipality to use and provide to its customers only biodegradable and/or recyclable paper straws individually".[84]

Canada edit

In May 2018, the Vancouver city council voted in favor of adopting a "Single Use Reduction Strategy", targeting single-use styrofoam containers and plastic straws.[85] The council approved the first phase of the regulations in November 2019, expected to be in place by April 2020, barring the distribution of single-use straws unless requested (with straws on hand required to be bendable for accessibility reasons). Bubble tea shops will be given a one-year exemption.[86][87]

In March 2019, Starbucks announced that they would be debuting strawless lids for cold drinks across Toronto as a part of their global environmental aspirations.[88]

In June 2019, in the lead-up to the federal election, prime minister Justin Trudeau announced his intent to enact legislation restricting the use of petroleum-based single-used plastics as early as 2021.[89][90][91] In 2023, the ban was overturned by the Federal Court, as it was found to be "unreasonable and unconstitutional".[92]

European Union edit

In May 2018, the European Union proposed a directive banning a number of single-use plastic items including straws, cotton buds, cutlery, balloon sticks and drink stirrers, in addition to limiting the use other single-use plastics and extending producer responsibility. The EU estimated the plan would avoid 3.4 million tons of carbon emissions, save consumers €6.5 billion, and prevent environmental damage that would cost the equivalent of €22 billion by the year 2030.[93][94] In October 2018, the European Parliament voted to pass the directive with 571 votes for and 53 votes against,[95] and the directive came into effect on July 2, 2021.[94] The specificity of the European market is that it prohibits all types of straws made of plastic, whether bio-based or compostable. This means that popular straws made of PHA, PBS or PLA for example, are prohibited in this territory.[96] It is not always clear whether or not a drinking straw complies with this legislation, so it is recommended that a pyrolysis test be performed to determine its composition.[97]

Taiwan edit

Single-use plastic straws banned in government facilities, schools, department stores, shopping malls and fast food restaurants from 1 July 2019.[98]

United Kingdom edit

The UK government committed at most £4 million to “Plastics innovation: towards zero waste” in the summer of 2017 in an attempt to mitigate the circulation of unnecessary plastic.[99] In this endeavor, eleven projects secured the full amount in government support.[99] These projects each invented new ways to recycle used plastic products and prevent them from reaching landfills.[99] In 2018, Queen Elizabeth II banned all single-use plastic items from her palaces.[100]

On 19 April 2018, ahead of Earth Day, a proposal to phase out single-use plastics was announced during the meeting of the Commonwealth Heads of Government. It is estimated that as of 2018, about 23 million straws are used and discarded daily in the UK.[101] In May 2019, England announced that it would ban single-use plastic straws, stirring sticks and cotton buds in April 2020: only registered pharmacies will be allowed to sell straws to the public, and restaurants may only offer them by request of customers.[102] The ban was delayed due to the coronavirus pandemic and came into effect on 1 October 2020.[103][104]

United States edit

California edit

On 7 November 2017, the city of Santa Cruz, California implemented a ban on all non-recyclable to-go containers, straws, and lids but allowed for 6 months for all businesses to come into compliance before enforcement would occur.[105] On 1 January 2018, the city of Alameda, California citing the Santa Cruz effort, implemented an immediate ban on all straws, except if requested by a customer, and gave business until 1 July 2018 when it would be required that all straws to be of compostable paper and that all other to-go containers be recyclable.[106][107]

A statewide California law restricting the providing of single-use plastic straws went into effect on 1 January 2019.[108] Under the law, restaurants are only allowed to provide single-use plastic straws upon request. The law applies to sit-down restaurants but exempts fast-food restaurants, delis, coffee shops, and restaurants that do takeout only.[109] The law does not apply to-go cups and takeaway drinks.[110] A restaurant will receive warnings for its first two violations, then a $25 per day fine for each subsequent violation, up to a maximum of $300 in a year.[111] In a statement released upon his signing the legislation into law, then-Governor Jerry Brown said "It is a very small step to make a customer who wants a plastic straw ask for it. And it might make them pause and think again about an alternative. But one thing is clear, we must find ways to reduce and eventually eliminate single-use plastic products."[112]

Local regulations have also been passed in Malibu, Davis and San Luis Obispo, California.[113]

Florida edit

Local regulations have been passed in Miami Beach and Fort Myers, Florida.[113]

Maryland edit

A ban on single-use straws has been instituted in Montgomery County, Maryland, going into full effect on December 21, 2021.[114]

Massachusetts edit

In 2015, Williamstown, Massachusetts banned straws that are not recyclable or compostable as part of its Article 42 polystyrene regulations.[115]

In the first half of 2018, three towns in Massachusetts banned petrochemical plastic straws directly in the case of Provincetown, and as part of broader sustainable food packaging laws in Andover and Brookline.[116]

In 2019, Longmeadow, Massachusetts banned plastic straws and polystyrene packaging.[117]

New York edit

A drinking straw ban has been proposed in New York City since May 2018.[118] Businesses are fined if a straw is provided (unless requested) and also fined if no plastic straws are available and also fined for other reasons regarding straws.[119][120]

Washington state edit

The city of Seattle implemented a ban on non-compostable disposable straws on 1 July 2018.[121][122]

Voluntary conversions edit

After consideration of a ban in the UK, in 2018, after a two-month trial of paper straws at a number of outlets in the UK,[123] McDonald's announced they would be switching to paper straws for all locations in the United Kingdom and Ireland.[124][125][126] and testing the switch in U.S. locations in June 2018.[127]

A month after the Vancouver ban passed (but before it took effect) Canada's second-largest fast food chain, A&W announced they would have plastic straws fully phased out by January 2019 in all of their locations.[128]

Various independent restaurants have also stopped using plastic straws.[129]

Starbucks announced conversion by 2020 to no-straw lids for all cold drinks except for frappucinos, which will be served with straws made from paper or other sustainable materials.[130][131]

Hyatt Hotels announced straws would be provided by request only, starting 1 September 2018. Royal Caribbean plans to offer only paper straws on request by 2019, and IKEA said it would eliminate all single-use plastic items by 2020.[113] Other conversions include Waitrose,[132] London City Airport,[132] and Burger King UK stores starting September 2018.[133] A few other cruise lines, air lines, beverage companies, and hotels, have also made partial or complete reductions, but most companies in those industries have not, as of May 2018.[132][131]

Opposition to bans edit

Since plastic straws account only for a tiny portion (0.022%) of plastic waste emitted in the oceans each year,[67] some pro-environment critics have argued that plastic straw bans are insufficient to address the issue of plastic waste, and are mostly symbolic.[134]

Full bans on single-use plastic straws have faced opposition from disability rights advocates, as they feel that alternative materials are not well-suited for use by those with impaired mobility (caused by conditions such as cerebral palsy and spinal muscular atrophy). Some with neuromuscular disabilities may rely on a plastic straw for its heat resistance and due to an inability to lift a cup.[135] The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) has required public places to provide plastic straws in order to ensure that those who need them will be able to access them.[136] In particular, not all people with disabilities may be capable of washing reusable straws, straws made from inflexible materials are not capable of being repositioned, paper straws lose their firmness over time when soaked in a beverage, and straws made from hard materials such as metal can cause injuries. Advocates have preferred laws that still allow plastic straws to be offered upon request.[71][72][137][138]

The American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC)—a U.S. conservative lobbying group against "excessive" regulation—has promoted model state bills which contain carve-outs for fast food and fast casual restaurants from straw bans (in effect only restricting "sit-down" restaurants), and restrict municipalities from preempting the rule with a stricter regulation (with the draft law text stating that the latter leads to "confusing and varying regulations that could lead to unnecessary increased costs for retail and food establishments to comply with such regulations").[139] In 2019, the re-election campaign of U.S., Republican Party president Donald Trump marketed packages of reusable plastic straws branded with Trump's name and colored in the signature red associated with the "Make America Great Again" slogan, as a fundraising stunt. The campaign website promoted them as an alternative to "liberal paper straws".[140][141]

Fiction edit

In Miguel de Cervantes's novel, Don Quixote (1605, 1615), the narrator tells of an innkeeper who, because Don Quixote refuses to remove his makeshift helmet, fashions a drinking straw by hollowing out a reed and pours wine through it, suggesting that Don Quixote was not accustomed to this method of drinking.[142]

Nicholson Baker's novel, The Mezzanine (1988), includes a detailed discussion of various types of drinking straws experienced by the narrator and their relative merits.

References edit

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External links edit

  • How plastic drinking straws are made
  • #stopsucking campaign 10 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine

drinking, straw, drinking, straw, utensil, that, intended, carry, contents, beverage, mouth, disposable, straws, commonly, made, from, plastics, however, environmental, concerns, related, plastic, pollution, regulation, have, rise, reusable, biodegradable, str. A drinking straw is a utensil that is intended to carry the contents of a beverage to one s mouth Disposable straws are commonly made from plastics However environmental concerns related to plastic pollution and new regulation have led to rise in reusable and biodegradable straws Following a rise in regulation and public concern some companies have even voluntarily banned or reduced the number of plastic straws used Alternative straws are often made of reusable materials like silicone or metal or alternative disposable and biodegradable materials like paper cardboard pasta or bamboo Plastic drinking straws with bellows segmentA straw is used by placing one end in one s mouth and the other in a beverage By employing suction the air pressure in one s mouth drops causing atmospheric pressure to force the liquid through the straw and into the mouth Drinking straws can be straight or have an angle adjustable bellows segment Straws have been used since earliest recorded history with the first extent straws dating from the 4th century BCE Different traditional drinks and foods use straws designed for explicit purposes such as the straw and sieve bombilla used to drink the mate infusion common to South America Since the early 20th century mass production of straws from plastic and other industrial products such as cellophane has increased the widespread availability of disposable straws Though most straws are used by able bodied peoples they play an important role in food and drink access for people with physical disabilities that effect peoples ability to swallow hold glassware or carry the weight of drinks or other liquids 1 2 Straws can also be an important part of both child and elderly care or in recovery from certain medical procedures such as dental work making it safer and easier to consume liquids though may not always be advisable depending on the health situation 3 4 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early examples 1 2 Mass production 2 Types 2 1 Plastic 2 2 Reusable 2 2 1 Bombilla 2 3 Single use 2 4 Edible 3 Environmental impact 3 1 Quantity 3 2 Microplastics 3 3 Alternatives 3 4 Greenwashing 4 Plastic straw bans and proposals 4 1 By country 4 1 1 Australia 4 1 2 Brazil 4 1 3 Canada 4 1 4 European Union 4 1 5 Taiwan 4 1 6 United Kingdom 4 1 7 United States 4 1 7 1 California 4 1 7 2 Florida 4 1 7 3 Maryland 4 1 7 4 Massachusetts 4 1 7 5 New York 4 1 7 6 Washington state 4 2 Voluntary conversions 4 3 Opposition to bans 5 Fiction 6 References 7 External linksHistory editEarly examples edit nbsp Ancient Egyptian painting 18th dynasty reign of Akhenaten Amenophis IV circa 1300 B C E depicting use of an early form of drinking straw in beer drinking Egyptian Museum of BerlinThe first known straws were made by the Sumerians and were used for drinking beer 5 probably to avoid the solid byproducts of fermentation that sink to the bottom 6 7 The oldest drinking straw in existence found in a Sumerian tomb dated 3 000 BCE was a gold tube inlaid with the precious blue stone lapis lazuli 5 Others claim metal sceptres discovered in Armenia in 1897 and date to the Maykop culture 3700 to 2900 BCE as the oldest surviving straws 8 9 nbsp A bombilla a metal straw with a filter on the bottom traditionally used for drinking mateIn the 1800s the rye grass straw came into fashion because it was cheap and soft but it had an unfortunate tendency to turn to mush when put in liquid 5 nbsp Marvin C StoneAmerican Marvin C Stone patented the modern drinking straw 8 1 2 inches long 10 and made of paper in 1888 to address the shortcomings of the rye grass straw 11 He came upon the idea while drinking a mint julep on a hot day in Washington D C 12 13 14 the taste of the rye grass straw was mixing with the drink and giving it a grassy taste which he found unsatisfactory 5 He wound paper around a pencil to make a thin tube slid out the pencil from one end and applied glue between the strips 5 He later refined it by building a machine that would coat the outside of the paper with wax to hold it together so the glue would not dissolve in bourbon 5 15 16 17 18 10 19 20 Early paper straws had a narrow bore to prevent seeds from clogging them 10 It was common to use two of them to reduce the effort needed to take each sip citation needed Mass production edit Plastic straws became widespread following World War II The materials used in their manufacture were inexpensive and the types of restaurant fare that they accompanied had become more affordable and popular 21 In 1930 Otto W Dieffenbach Sr developed and produced a cellophane drinking straw in Baltimore MD His company known as Glassips Inc produced straws for restaurants and other products One patent dates to 1954 The Sr Mr Dieffenbach served as chairman until 1972 and the business then based in Towson MD was sold in 1979 22 23 One of the first mass produced twisted straw was Sip N See invented by Milton Dinhofer 24 who later came up with the idea and designs for the chimp in the iconic game Barrel of Monkeys Dinhofer originally patented his straw in the shape of a scissor with two loops on top 25 but Macy s would not carry the straw unless it had a character on it They suggested Dinhofer make three straws eventually patented in 1950 26 a cowboy a clown and an animal for which he made an elephant Each of his characters was attached to a looping soft polyethylene straw and users were to sip from another detachable small straight straw of acetate Rexor Corp copyrighted 27 the straw the same year but Macy s decided not to carry them Dinhofer first marketed the straws with Woolworths The straws were sold in individual boxes and more characters were eventually added 28 Other buyers began to carry it too and it was marketed as an action drinking toy 29 Sip N See went on to sell approximately six million units and a decade later the s shape of the arms on the cowboy straw would inspire Dinhofer s monkey design for Barrel of Monkeys Types editDrinking straws come in many variations and are manufactured using a variety of materials Plastic edit nbsp Plastic drinking straws in a containerThe most common form of drinking straw is made of the thermoplastic polymer Polypropylene This plastic is known for its durability lightness and ability to be manufactured at a low cost 30 Other plastic polymers that exhibit these traits include polyethylene PE and polyvinyl chloride PVC 31 These attributes are what have made the traditional plastic straw ubiquitous in fast food establishments and take out orders around the world Additionally other advantages of plastic straws include their ability to be molded into different shapes and sizes while also being able to withstand a wide range of temperatures without deforming 32 This is important because straws must be temperature resistant and thermally insulated because they can be used in both hot and cold beverages nbsp A pink articulated plastic straw in a drinkOne interesting variation of the plastic straw is the bendy straw commonly referred to in the industry as an articulated straw This straw has a concertina type hinge near its top to allow for improved maneuverability of the straw when drinking a beverage especially from a low angle The articulated straw was invented by Joseph Friedman in 1937 5 He quickly developed the straw after he saw his daughter struggling to use a normal straight straw 33 nbsp An astronaut using a plastic straw in space on the 1998 NASA mission STS 95 Straws help reduce the likelihood that liquids will escape containment and contaminate equipment within space vessels Specially designed straws and other drinking equipment such as hydration packs can be used in high complexity environments where liquids can cause problems Another variation of the plastic straw the spoon straw has a spoon like tip at the bottom and is often used with iced slush beverages 34 Stir straws with a relatively short length and quite a narrow bore are often given along with disposable cups for preparing coffee or tea and serve the primary function of being able to stir in sugar sweetener cream or non dairy creamer as well as allowing for sipping a hot beverage Additionally boba tea plastic straws with wider openings are commonly used to drink bubble tea to better accommodate its characteristic tapioca pearls The tip of these straws is often cut at an angle creating a point which allows one to use the straw to puncture the plastic cover of bubble tea drinks 35 Plastic straws can also be embellished with some forms marketed as crazy straws having a number of twists and turns at the top These straws are often marketed and can be entertaining for young children 36 37 The crazy straw was invented by Arthur Philip Gildersleeve and patented in 1936 38 Reusable edit nbsp A reusable metal straw with a silicone tipEnvironmental concerns stemming from the impact plastic waste has had on the ocean have led to a rise in reusable straws 39 40 Reusable straws are primarily being manufactured out of Polylactic acid PLA 41 silicone and metal 42 Polylactic acid and silicone straws are the most similar in texture and feel to their plastic counterparts however they fit into the category of biodegradable polymers These types of straws have some benefits over other more ecologically conscious straws because they are resistant to disintegrating in one s drink and provide adequate insulation for hot and cold drinks 39 One manufacturer of silicon straws even claims that their straws can be burned into biodegradable ash 40 Metal and glass straws are other reusable alternatives A vampire straw is a large metal drinking straw with a pointed tip that allows it to double as a dagger like weapon A man was arrested at Boston Logan International Airport after a vampire straw was confiscated from his carry on luggage 43 Bombilla edit This section is an excerpt from Bombilla edit nbsp Two stamped 800 silver bombillas with gold plated heads and removable filters The filter in the middle of the picture is detached from the bombilla tube at the bottom of the picture and is shown in the open position which is used for cleaning the filter Once the filter is folded the two semicircular filter threads form a circular threaded neck allowing the filter to screw into the tube The bombilla tubes are decorated A bombilla Spanish bomba Portuguese or massasa Arabic is a type of drinking straw used to drink mate 44 In metal bombillas the lower end is perforated and acts as a metal filter which is used to separate the mate infusion from leaves stems and other mate debris and functions in a similar fashion to the perforated metal screen of a teapot 45 Filters can be removable and can be opened for cleaning or they may be permanently fixed to the bombilla stem Bombillas vary in length but a popular length is approximately 7 inches 18 cm long 46 Traditional bombillas are made of metal alloys such as an alloy of copper and nickel called alpaca silver or German silver stainless steel and 800 silver which is used to construct the filter and stem sometimes combined with a gold plated head Low end bombillas are made from hollow stemmed cane Silver bombillas are popular 47 In recent times the traditional silver bombillas are being replaced by ones made from stainless steel 48 Silver bombillas were used by the privileged classes while those made of straw were used by people of lesser means 45 Due to the high thermal conductivity of silver bombillas and gourds made of silver can get very hot fast requiring caution when drinking hot mate tea to avoid burns 47 49 Single use edit Some companies such as Starbucks have moved away from plastic straws 50 Bamboo straws are sometimes made from the moso bamboo tree Phyllostachys edulis 51 Some companies such as McDonald s have switched to paper and paperboard straws 41 There are some innovation companies that try to introduce alternative to plastic straws such as Drinking Straw that are made out of wheat grass or reed Edible edit Edible straws have been made out of materials like rice seaweed rye 52 and confectioneries such as candy 53 54 55 Flavor straws are a form of drinking straw with a flavoring included designed to make drinking milk more pleasant for children They first marketed in the United States in 1956 as Flav R Straws 56 Newer variations of the original idea have been resurrected in forms such as Sipahhs and Magic Milk Straws that contain hundreds of flavored pellets encased within a stiff plastic straw Environmental impact edit nbsp A pink heart shaped plastic strawPlastic drinking straw production contributes a small amount to petroleum consumption and the used straws become a small part of global plastic pollution when discarded most after a single use 57 Plastic straws are not widely recycled and may continue to pollute various aspects of the environment including bodies of water and streets due to their lack of proper disposal 58 The image of a plastic straw lodged into the nostril of a sea turtle filmed by marine biologist Christine Figgener quickly spread across all forms of media and spurred the elevation of awareness regarding the potential danger of plastic straws for marine life 31 The scientist who uploaded the video remarks that it is the emotional pull of the imagery rather than the significance of the plastic straw itself in the plastic debacle that garnered such high viewership 59 Quantity edit Some of this article s listed sources may not be reliable Please help improve this article by looking for better more reliable sources Unreliable citations may be challenged and removed November 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message One anti straw advocacy group has estimated that about 500 million straws are used daily in the United States alone an average 1 6 straws per capita per day 60 61 62 This statistic has been criticized as inaccurate because it was approximated by Milo Cress who was nine years old at the time after surveying straw manufacturers 63 64 to ask their estimates of the total which he then averaged 65 Further details are unavailable as being 9 he had not thought to document the process closely 65 66 This figure has been widely cited by major news organizations 65 Market research firm Freedonia Group estimated the number to be 390 million 65 Another market research firm Technomic estimated the number to be 170 million although this number excludes some types of straws 65 Plastic straws amounted to 5 7 5 of all waste collected from beaches during the 2017 International Cleanup Event conducted by Ocean Conservancy making it a minor contamination source yet considered easy to avoid 31 In total they are less than 0 022 of plastic waste emitted to oceans 67 Microplastics edit Microplastics pollution is a concern if plastic waste is improperly dumped 68 If plastic straws are improperly disposed of they can be transported via water into soil ecosystems and others where they break down into smaller more hazardous pieces than the original plastic straw 68 Water can break down plastic waste into microplastic and nanoplastic particles 31 These particles are capable of transmitting harmful substances or can themselves prove dangerous as they have been shown to negatively affect the surrounding environment 31 Alternatives edit nbsp Paper drinking strawsAlternatives to plastic straws some reusable exist although they are not always readily available or deemed to be of sufficient quality for all users including in particular those with a disability Paper straws have proliferated as a popular alternative although they are prone to losing their rigidity when soaked inside a beverage and in some cases are not durable enough for thicker beverages such as milkshakes Metal straws are more durable but they are incapable of being bent can damage teeth or lacerate children or kill adults during falls 69 and some restaurants have reported them as a target of theft 70 71 72 73 Some critics have argued that paper and metal alternatives are no more environmentally friendly than plastic citing the environmental impacts of paper and mining and that paper straws would likely end up in landfills and not be composted 70 74 In August 2019 after deploying paper straws in the United Kingdom McDonald s stated that its straws could not actually be recycled at present since their thickness makes it difficult for them to be processed by our waste solution providers The chain stated that they went towards energy production and not to landfills 74 70 75 Polylactic acid PLA a biodegradable plastic requires 69 fewer fossil fuel resources to produce than plastic but it requires very specific conditions to break down fully 76 Polyhydroxyalkanoate PHA derived from plant oil is marine biodegradable In 2021 the manufacturing company Wincup was distributing a PHA product branded as the Phade straw 77 As of 2021 several eco friendly alternative materials have been tried Among them are hay straws bamboo straws seaweed straws and straws made from naturally dried fallen coconut leaves 78 Greenwashing edit Not all attempts to be more environmentally friendly are in earnest though In an attempt to artificially boost sales some groups have been guilty of greenwashing or falsely marketing their products as a viable environmentally friendly alternative when it is actually just as harmful to the environment or worse 31 These marketing tactics draw in well meaning consumers who believe they are helping the environment often by paying more for a product when they are instead encouraging these misleading strategies 31 To combat this scheme TerraChoice an America based advertising company crafted a rubric to calculate the amount of greenwashing prevalent in a product 31 They determined that 95 of products they surveyed at American and Canadian stores are guilty of at least one act of greenwashing 31 Plastic straw bans and proposals editIn the late 2010s a movement towards laws banning or otherwise restricting the use of plastic straws and other single use plastics emerged Environmental groups have encouraged consumers to object to forced inclusion of plastic straws with food service 79 80 The movement followed the discovery of plastic particles in oceanic garbage patches and larger plastic waste reduction efforts that focused on banning plastic bags in some jurisdictions It has been intensified by viral videos including one of a plastic straw being removed from a sea turtle s nostril by biologist Nathan J Robinson and filmed by marine biologist and activist Christine Figgener 81 59 By country edit Australia edit A single use plastic ban was introduced in the state of South Australia in 2020 52 Fast food chain McDonald s promised to phase out plastic straws throughout Australia by 2020 52 Brazil edit On 5 July 2018 the city of Rio de Janeiro became the first state capital of Brazil to forbid the distribution of plastic straws 82 83 forcing restaurants coffee shops bars and the like beach huts and hawkers of the municipality to use and provide to its customers only biodegradable and or recyclable paper straws individually 84 Canada edit In May 2018 the Vancouver city council voted in favor of adopting a Single Use Reduction Strategy targeting single use styrofoam containers and plastic straws 85 The council approved the first phase of the regulations in November 2019 expected to be in place by April 2020 barring the distribution of single use straws unless requested with straws on hand required to be bendable for accessibility reasons Bubble tea shops will be given a one year exemption 86 87 In March 2019 Starbucks announced that they would be debuting strawless lids for cold drinks across Toronto as a part of their global environmental aspirations 88 In June 2019 in the lead up to the federal election prime minister Justin Trudeau announced his intent to enact legislation restricting the use of petroleum based single used plastics as early as 2021 89 90 91 In 2023 the ban was overturned by the Federal Court as it was found to be unreasonable and unconstitutional 92 European Union edit In May 2018 the European Union proposed a directive banning a number of single use plastic items including straws cotton buds cutlery balloon sticks and drink stirrers in addition to limiting the use other single use plastics and extending producer responsibility The EU estimated the plan would avoid 3 4 million tons of carbon emissions save consumers 6 5 billion and prevent environmental damage that would cost the equivalent of 22 billion by the year 2030 93 94 In October 2018 the European Parliament voted to pass the directive with 571 votes for and 53 votes against 95 and the directive came into effect on July 2 2021 94 The specificity of the European market is that it prohibits all types of straws made of plastic whether bio based or compostable This means that popular straws made of PHA PBS or PLA for example are prohibited in this territory 96 It is not always clear whether or not a drinking straw complies with this legislation so it is recommended that a pyrolysis test be performed to determine its composition 97 Taiwan edit Single use plastic straws banned in government facilities schools department stores shopping malls and fast food restaurants from 1 July 2019 98 United Kingdom edit The UK government committed at most 4 million to Plastics innovation towards zero waste in the summer of 2017 in an attempt to mitigate the circulation of unnecessary plastic 99 In this endeavor eleven projects secured the full amount in government support 99 These projects each invented new ways to recycle used plastic products and prevent them from reaching landfills 99 In 2018 Queen Elizabeth II banned all single use plastic items from her palaces 100 On 19 April 2018 ahead of Earth Day a proposal to phase out single use plastics was announced during the meeting of the Commonwealth Heads of Government It is estimated that as of 2018 about 23 million straws are used and discarded daily in the UK 101 In May 2019 England announced that it would ban single use plastic straws stirring sticks and cotton buds in April 2020 only registered pharmacies will be allowed to sell straws to the public and restaurants may only offer them by request of customers 102 The ban was delayed due to the coronavirus pandemic and came into effect on 1 October 2020 103 104 United States edit California edit On 7 November 2017 the city of Santa Cruz California implemented a ban on all non recyclable to go containers straws and lids but allowed for 6 months for all businesses to come into compliance before enforcement would occur 105 On 1 January 2018 the city of Alameda California citing the Santa Cruz effort implemented an immediate ban on all straws except if requested by a customer and gave business until 1 July 2018 when it would be required that all straws to be of compostable paper and that all other to go containers be recyclable 106 107 A statewide California law restricting the providing of single use plastic straws went into effect on 1 January 2019 108 Under the law restaurants are only allowed to provide single use plastic straws upon request The law applies to sit down restaurants but exempts fast food restaurants delis coffee shops and restaurants that do takeout only 109 The law does not apply to go cups and takeaway drinks 110 A restaurant will receive warnings for its first two violations then a 25 per day fine for each subsequent violation up to a maximum of 300 in a year 111 In a statement released upon his signing the legislation into law then Governor Jerry Brown said It is a very small step to make a customer who wants a plastic straw ask for it And it might make them pause and think again about an alternative But one thing is clear we must find ways to reduce and eventually eliminate single use plastic products 112 Local regulations have also been passed in Malibu Davis and San Luis Obispo California 113 Florida edit Local regulations have been passed in Miami Beach and Fort Myers Florida 113 Maryland edit A ban on single use straws has been instituted in Montgomery County Maryland going into full effect on December 21 2021 114 Massachusetts edit In 2015 Williamstown Massachusetts banned straws that are not recyclable or compostable as part of its Article 42 polystyrene regulations 115 In the first half of 2018 three towns in Massachusetts banned petrochemical plastic straws directly in the case of Provincetown and as part of broader sustainable food packaging laws in Andover and Brookline 116 In 2019 Longmeadow Massachusetts banned plastic straws and polystyrene packaging 117 New York edit A drinking straw ban has been proposed in New York City since May 2018 118 Businesses are fined if a straw is provided unless requested and also fined if no plastic straws are available and also fined for other reasons regarding straws 119 120 Washington state edit The city of Seattle implemented a ban on non compostable disposable straws on 1 July 2018 121 122 Voluntary conversions edit After consideration of a ban in the UK in 2018 after a two month trial of paper straws at a number of outlets in the UK 123 McDonald s announced they would be switching to paper straws for all locations in the United Kingdom and Ireland 124 125 126 and testing the switch in U S locations in June 2018 127 A month after the Vancouver ban passed but before it took effect Canada s second largest fast food chain A amp W announced they would have plastic straws fully phased out by January 2019 in all of their locations 128 Various independent restaurants have also stopped using plastic straws 129 Starbucks announced conversion by 2020 to no straw lids for all cold drinks except for frappucinos which will be served with straws made from paper or other sustainable materials 130 131 Hyatt Hotels announced straws would be provided by request only starting 1 September 2018 Royal Caribbean plans to offer only paper straws on request by 2019 and IKEA said it would eliminate all single use plastic items by 2020 113 Other conversions include Waitrose 132 London City Airport 132 and Burger King UK stores starting September 2018 133 A few other cruise lines air lines beverage companies and hotels have also made partial or complete reductions but most companies in those industries have not as of May 2018 132 131 Opposition to bans edit Since plastic straws account only for a tiny portion 0 022 of plastic waste emitted in the oceans each year 67 some pro environment critics have argued that plastic straw bans are insufficient to address the issue of plastic waste and are mostly symbolic 134 Full bans on single use plastic straws have faced opposition from disability rights advocates as they feel that alternative materials are not well suited for use by those with impaired mobility caused by conditions such as cerebral palsy and spinal muscular atrophy Some with neuromuscular disabilities may rely on a plastic straw for its heat resistance and due to an inability to lift a cup 135 The Americans with Disabilities Act ADA has required public places to provide plastic straws in order to ensure that those who need them will be able to access them 136 In particular not all people with disabilities may be capable of washing reusable straws straws made from inflexible materials are not capable of being repositioned paper straws lose their firmness over time when soaked in a beverage and straws made from hard materials such as metal can cause injuries Advocates have preferred laws that still allow plastic straws to be offered upon request 71 72 137 138 The American Legislative Exchange Council ALEC a U S conservative lobbying group against excessive regulation has promoted model state bills which contain carve outs for fast food and fast casual restaurants from straw bans in effect only restricting sit down restaurants and restrict municipalities from preempting the rule with a stricter regulation with the draft law text stating that the latter leads to confusing and varying regulations that could lead to unnecessary increased costs for retail and food establishments to comply with such regulations 139 In 2019 the re election campaign of U S Republican Party president Donald Trump marketed packages of reusable plastic straws branded with Trump s name and colored in the signature red associated with the Make America Great Again slogan as a fundraising stunt The campaign website promoted them as an alternative to liberal paper straws 140 141 Fiction editIn Miguel de Cervantes s novel Don Quixote 1605 1615 the narrator tells of an innkeeper who because Don Quixote refuses to remove his makeshift helmet fashions a drinking straw by hollowing out a reed and pours wine through it suggesting that Don Quixote was not accustomed to this method of drinking 142 Nicholson Baker s novel The Mezzanine 1988 includes a detailed discussion of various types of drinking straws experienced by the narrator and their relative merits References edit Wong Alice 19 July 2018 Banning Plastic Straws Is a Huge Burden on Disabled People Eater Retrieved 12 January 2024 Danovich Tove Godoy Maria 11 July 2018 Why People With Disabilities Want Bans On Plastic Straws To Be More Flexible The Salt NPR Pang Bo Cox Paul Codino Julianna Collum Austin Sims Jake Rubin Adam 30 January 2020 Straw vs Cup Use in Patients with Symptoms of Oropharyngeal Dysphagia Spartan Medical Research Journal 4 2 doi 10 51894 001c 11591 ISSN 2474 7629 PMC 7746115 PMID 33655165 EPA NSW 10 November 2022 Plastic single use straws exemptions guidance NSW Environment Protection Authority Retrieved 12 January 2024 a b c d e f g Thompson Derek 22 November 2011 The Amazing History and the Strange Invention of the Bendy Straw The Atlantic Maeir Aren M Garfinkel Yosef 2013 Bone and Metal Straw tip Beer strainers from the Ancient Near East Levant 24 218 223 doi 10 1179 007589192790220793 Homan Michael 2004 Beer and Its Drinkers An Ancient Near Eastern Love Story Near Eastern Archaeology 67 2 84 95 doi 10 2307 4132364 JSTOR 4132364 S2CID 162357890 The oldest known drinking straws date back to over 5 000 years ago Science News 19 January 2022 Retrieved 23 January 2022 Dvorsky George 18 January 2022 These 5 000 Year Old Drinking Straws Were Used to Sip Beer Researchers Say Gizmodo Retrieved 20 January 2022 a b c B V Tembo Paper A History of Paper Straws Tembo Paper US 375962 Stone Marvin Artificial straw issued 1888 Hollander Catherine 23 October 2014 A Brief History of the Straw bonappetit com Retrieved 6 August 2018 The Backlash Against Plastic Straws Is Spreading Here s How They Got So Popular in the First Place Time Retrieved 6 August 2018 A Brief History of the Modern Day Straw the World s Most Wasteful Commodity atlasobscura com 7 July 2017 Retrieved 6 August 2018 Honestly Who Likes Paper Straws esquire com 23 March 2017 Retrieved 6 August 2018 http www youngscientist com au wp content uploads 2017 02 Year 5 Straws that Stay YSA pdf Year 5 Straws that Stay 1888 Heavy Duty Paper Drinking Straws Pack of 24 Driehaus Museum Store Archived from the original on 10 August 2021 Retrieved 10 August 2021 History StoneStraw Archived from the original on 6 December 2021 Retrieved 10 August 2021 Good to the last drop The drinking straw was invented in Washington The Washington Post The Washington Post Hollander Catherine 23 October 2014 A Brief History of the Straw Bon Appetit The Backlash Against Plastic Straws Is Spreading Here s How They Got So Popular in the First Place Time Retrieved 3 December 2018 Otto Dieffenbach 19 Nov 1880 7 July 1973 The Baltimore Sun 9 July 1973 p 9 via newspapers com Baltimore Sun Baltimore breaking news sports business entertainment weather and traffic baltimoresun com Monkey Business Rensselaer Office of Strategic Communications and External Relations Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Spring 2015 12 13 Dinhofer M Drinking Straw Google Patents Retrieved 29 December 2018 Dinhofer Milton Toy Drinking Tube Google Patents Retrieved 29 December 2018 Catalogue of Copyright Entries Third Series Google Books The Library of Congress January June 1950 p 80 Retrieved 29 December 2018 Dinhofer M Drinking Straw Google Patents Retrieved 29 December 2018 Sip N See Advertisement The North Adams Transcript North Adams Massachusetts 14 August 1951 p 3 Malpass Dennis B Band Elliot I 18 June 2012 Introduction to Industrial Polypropylene doi 10 1002 9781118463215 ISBN 9781118463215 a b c d e f g h i Viera Joao S C Marques Monica R C Nazareth Monick Cruz Jimenez Paula Christine Castro Italo Braga April 2020 On replacing single use plastic with so called biodegradable ones The case with straws Environmental Science amp Policy 106 177 181 doi 10 1016 j envsci 2020 02 007 S2CID 214458686 Polypropylene the definitive user s guide and databook 1 November 1998 Friedman and the Flexible Straw Archived from the original on 4 April 2009 Polar Krush launches 100 recyclable spoon straw for iced drinks beveragedaily com 12 April 2019 Retrieved 20 January 2020 Would you pay 2 for a straw San Francisco bubble tea shops wrestle with plastic ban usatoday com Retrieved 6 August 2018 Hollander Catherine October 2014 A Brief History of the Straw Bon Appetit Magazine Archived from the original on 7 September 2015 Retrieved 20 September 2015 Bluestone Judith 2005 Crazy Straw The Fabric of Autism Weaving the Threads into a Cogent Theory Sapphire Enterprises p 182 ISBN 9780972023528 unreliable medical source Drinking Tube a b Zanghelini Guilherme Marcelo Cherubini Edivan Dias Ricardo Kabe Yuki Hamilton Onda Delgado Jorge Juan Soto December 2020 Comparative life cycle assessment of drinking straws in Brazil Journal of Cleaner Production 276 123070 doi 10 1016 j jclepro 2020 123070 S2CID 225153562 a b Letcher Trevor M 2020 Introduction to plastic waste and recycling Plastic Waste and Recycling Elsevier pp 3 12 doi 10 1016 b978 0 12 817880 5 00001 3 ISBN 978 0 12 817880 5 S2CID 216542304 retrieved 10 November 2020 a b Monomers Polymers and Composites from Renewable Resources 2008 doi 10 1016 b978 0 08 045316 3 x0001 4 ISBN 9780080453163 Brissette Christy 3 July 2018 Plastic straws aren t just bad for the environment they can be bad for your body Washington Post Retrieved 20 January 2020 What is a vampire straw A closer look at the weapon confiscated from a Boston traveler s luggage CNN 30 April 2023 Diccionario de la lengua espanola Diccionario de la lengua espanola Real Academia Espanola Lema rae es Retrieved 16 December 2013 a b The Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal Exhibiting a View of the Progressive Discoveries and Improvements in the Sciences and the Arts Adam and Charles Black 1856 p 194 The mate is then filled with yerva after the bombilla has been placed in position The bombilla is literally a little pump that is a sucking tube ending in a perforated bulb which performs the office of the perforated diaphragm in our teapot Journal of the American Historical Society of Germans from Russia American Historical Society of Germans from Russia 1978 pp 29 46 The straw rorchen or bombilla is about seven inches long with a strainer on the lower end to a b Fiona Adams 1 July 2011 CultureShock Argentina A Survival Guide to Customs and Etiquette Marshall Cavendish International Asia Pte Ltd p 133 ISBN 978 981 4346 77 1 Elisabeth Hsu Stephen Harris 2010 Plants Health and Healing On the Interface of Ethnobotany and Medical Anthropology Berghahn Books p 281 ISBN 978 1 84545 060 1 Jeannine J Falino Gerald W R Ward 2008 Silver of the Americas 1600 2000 American Silver in the Museum of Fine Arts Boston MFA Pub p 488 QUOTE As with mate cups made entirely of silver the thermal conductivity of silver bombillas may have posed problems for the drinker ISBN 978 0 87846 721 1 Starbucks to ban plastics straws in all stores by 2020 BBC News 9 July 2018 Retrieved 17 February 2021 Phyllostachys edulis Carriere J Houz GRIN Global npgsweb ars grin gov Retrieved 17 February 2021 a b c Rye cycled natural straws helping environment and farmers in war on single use plastic ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation 11 October 2019 Retrieved 11 October 2019 Zhang Jenny G 30 August 2019 The Dream of a Delicious Alternative Cereal Straw Eater Retrieved 20 January 2020 Concio Chardynne Joy H 24 April 2019 The Incredible Edible Straw Science Times Retrieved 20 January 2020 Krueger Alyson 7 October 2019 Do You Really Need a Straw With That The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 20 January 2020 Milk plant monthly Volume 45 p 68 1956 quote New Flavored Straws For Use in Milk Drinks A new type of straw with built in flavor for use with milk drinks has been introduced by Flav R Straws Inc Types of Plastic A Complete Plastic Numbers Guide YesStraws 17 January 2020 Retrieved 13 May 2021 Plastic Straws BeyondPlastics Retrieved 27 March 2023 a b Figgener Christine November 2018 What I learnt pulling a straw out of a turtle s nose Nature 563 7730 157 Bibcode 2018Natur 563 157F doi 10 1038 d41586 018 07287 z ISSN 0028 0836 PMID 30401858 S2CID 53234031 Straw Wars The Fight to Rid the Oceans of Discarded Plastic National Geographic News 12 April 2017 Archived from the original on 29 June 2017 Retrieved 18 July 2017 Bailey Kate FAQs and Links Milo s Be Straw Free Campaign Eco Cycle Archived from the original on 5 July 2017 Retrieved 18 July 2017 UNDERSTANDING PLASTIC POLLUTION Strawless Ocean Archived from the original on 3 May 2018 Retrieved 22 February 2018 California Considers 1 000 Fine for Waiters Offering Unsolicited Plastic Straws reason com 25 January 2018 Retrieved 6 August 2018 Americans Throw Out Millions Of Plastic Straws Daily Here s What s Being Done About It a b c d e Chokshi Niraj 19 July 2018 How a 9 Year Old Boy s Statistic Shaped a Debate on Straws The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 7 August 2021 Connor Alex That anti straw movement It s all based on one 9 year old s suspect statistic USA TODAY a b Science Says Amount of straws plastic pollution is huge phys org Retrieved 6 December 2018 straws add up to only about 2 000 tons of the nearly 9 million tons of plastic waste that yearly hits the waters a b Chae Yooeun An Youn Joo 1 September 2018 Current research trends on plastic pollution and ecological impacts on the soil ecosystem A review Environmental Pollution 240 387 395 doi 10 1016 j envpol 2018 05 008 ISSN 0269 7491 PMID 29753246 S2CID 21720615 Fatal Accident With Metal Straw Highlights a Risk The disturbing death of a woman in Britain renewed a debate that has followed bans on plastic straws around the world a b c Lowrey Annie 20 August 2019 The Case Against Paper Straws The Atlantic Retrieved 21 January 2020 a b Why People With Disabilities Want Bans On Plastic Straws To Be More Flexible NPR org Retrieved 20 January 2020 a b Dawes Samantha Keane Daniel 10 July 2019 Yuppy activism Disability advocates condemn plastic straw ban ABC News Retrieved 20 January 2020 Olsen Martine Berg 8 July 2019 Woman 60 died after falling on eco friendly metal straw which pierced her eye Metro a b Wasted efforts Even paper straws won t break down in the dump says waste consultant CBC News 17 July 2018 Retrieved 21 January 2020 McDonald s paper straws cannot be recycled BBC News 5 August 2019 Retrieved 21 January 2020 Tokiwa Yutaka Calabia Buenaventurada Ugwu Charles Aiba Seiichi 2009 Biodegradability of Plastics International Journal of Molecular Sciences 10 9 3722 3742 doi 10 3390 ijms10093722 PMC 2769161 PMID 19865515 DiPalma Brooke 15 February 2021 Dunkin partners with Wincup to test biodegradable straw as more companies go green finance yahoo com Archived from the original on 15 February 2021 Retrieved 15 February 2021 Peters Adele 7 March 2019 These straws work like plastic but they re hyper compostable Fast Company Retrieved 13 May 2021 No straw please plasticpollutioncoalition org McDonald s pushed to ban plastic straws in the United States S J Mercury News McClatchy 30 April 2018 Plastic straws clog the ocean hurt fish Now there s a growing movement to ban them Are plastic straws out of time or can they survive like plastic bags nbcnews com 26 May 2018 Retrieved 6 August 2018 Canudinho de plastico no Rio e proibido e a fiscalizacao comecou G1 in Portuguese 19 July 2018 Retrieved 10 September 2019 Boeckel Cristina 5 July 2018 Crivella sanciona lei que obriga bares e restaurantes a oferecer canudos de papel biodegradavel ou reciclavel no Rio G1 in Portuguese Retrieved 10 September 2019 LEI Nº 6 384 DE 4 DE JULHO DE 2018 Camara Municipal do Rio de Janeiro in Portuguese 4 July 2018 Retrieved 10 September 2019 City of Vancouver votes to ban single use plastic straws and styrofoam cups Global News Retrieved 21 January 2020 Vancouver approves ban on straws plastic bags Global News Retrieved 21 January 2020 Vancouver bans plastic bags straws foam containers and other single use items British Columbia 28 November 2019 Retrieved 21 January 2020 Gladysz Kayla 20 March 2019 Starbucks to launch strawless cold drink lids in Toronto this summer Daily Hive Retrieved 21 March 2019 Beaumont Hilary 10 June 2019 Canada Will Ban Single Use Plastics If Trudeau Is Re elected Vice Retrieved 21 January 2020 Ballingall Alex 10 June 2019 Trudeau government plans to ban harmful single use plastics in Canada as early as 2021 The Hamilton Spectator ISSN 1189 9417 Retrieved 21 January 2020 Trudeau eyeing a Canadian ban on single use plastics by 2021 Global News Retrieved 21 January 2020 The Federal Court just overturned Ottawa s single use plastic ban National Globalnews ca Global News Retrieved 17 November 2023 EU proposes ban on straws and other single use plastics BBC News 28 May 2018 Retrieved 1 July 2018 a b European Union Ban on Single Use Plastics Takes Effect Library of Congress Retrieved 17 January 2022 Single use plastics ban approved by European Parliament BBC News 24 October 2018 Retrieved 17 January 2022 French Government FAQ Plastic PDF Honorine 12 May 2022 How to check the conformity of your drinking straws Drinking Straw Retrieved 18 February 2023 Taiwan s ban on plastic straws kicks in today Taiwan News 1 July 2019 Retrieved 23 August 2022 a b c Kenward Michael December 2018 Plastic waste is the last straw says UK MRS Bulletin 43 12 913 914 Bibcode 2018MRSBu 43 913K doi 10 1557 mrs 2018 307 ISSN 0883 7694 S2CID 139946659 Ferro Shaunacy 21 February 2018 Sip on This The Queen Has Banned Plastic Straws at Buckingham Palace Mental Floss Retrieved 8 June 2018 Bruner Raisa 19 April 2018 The U K Might Want to Ban All Plastic Straws and Drink Stirrers So Savor Those Sips Today Time Retrieved 8 June 2018 Shukman David 22 May 2019 Government to set new controls on plastic straws BBC News Retrieved 18 February 2020 Evans Judith Plastic straws and stirrers ban delayed because of coronavirus Financial Times Retrieved 16 April 2020 Plastic straw ban in England comes into force BBC News October 2020 Retrieved 17 January 2022 City Newsroom the City of Santa Cruz www cityofsantacruz com Press release Retrieved 6 August 2018 Straws Upon Request in the New Year Archived from the original on 4 August 2018 Retrieved 4 August 2018 Go Green City of Alameda Archived from the original on 4 May 2020 Retrieved 16 April 2020 Daniels Jeff 21 September 2018 California governor signs bill to reduce plastic straw use cut waste choking our planet CNBC Retrieved 21 November 2018 Filloon Whitney 21 September 2018 California Bans Restaurants From Automatically Giving Out Plastic Straws Eater Retrieved 21 November 2018 Brueck Hilary 21 September 2018 California just became the first US state to ban plastic straws in restaurants unless customers ask Business Insider Retrieved 21 November 2018 Koseff Alexei 20 September 2018 You ll have to ask if you want a plastic straw in California under new law The Sacramento Bee Retrieved 21 November 2018 Brown Edmund G Jr 20 September 2018 Assembly Bill 1884 Signing Message PDF Governor of California Archived from the original PDF on 21 September 2018 Retrieved 21 November 2018 a b c LaMagna Maria Starbucks joins McDonald s IKEA Seattle and Vancouver in ban on plastic straws marketwatch com Retrieved 6 August 2018 Montgomery County s Ban on Single Use Straws Montgomery County Department of Environmental Protection Retrieved 24 November 2021 REDUCTION OF POLYSTYRENE Retrieved 20 November 2018 Emily Norton 10 August 2018 Should cities and towns ban plastic straws Boston Globe Retrieved 16 August 2018 Longmeadow residents vote on 24 articles at Town Meeting 6 November 2019 Retrieved 6 November 2019 Levine Alexandra S 23 May 2018 New York Today The Scourge of Plastic Straws The New York Times Retrieved 16 June 2018 City Council passes bill limiting single use plastic straws in eateries www ny1 com New York s Straw Law Will Fine Business for Giving Out Unsolicited Straws and Also for Not Having Enough Straws 4 October 2021 Food Service Packaging Requirements www seattle gov Seattle Public Utilities Retrieved 8 July 2018 Seattle becomes the latest city to ban plastic straws and utensils CNN Retrieved 7 July 2018 Vaughan Adam 15 June 2018 McDonald s to switch to paper straws in UK after customer campaign The Guardian Retrieved 19 June 2018 McDonald s to replace plastic straws with paper ones in UK and Ireland branches Sky News 15 June 2018 Retrieved 16 June 2018 McMahon Aine 15 June 2018 McDonald s to move from plastic to paper straws The Irish Times Retrieved 16 June 2018 McDonald s to ditch plastic straws BBC News 15 June 2018 Retrieved 16 June 2018 Eitel Barry 16 June 2018 McDonald s to test paper straws in US Anadolu Agency Retrieved 16 June 2018 Major fast food chain to eliminate plastic straws by year s end CFFR 8 June 2018 Retrieved 8 June 2018 Business Directory The Last Plastic Straw thelastplasticstraw org Retrieved 6 August 2018 Garcia Tonya Starbucks and McDonald s plastic straw removal will go down well with millennials marketwatch com Retrieved 6 August 2018 a b These 8 Companies Are Ditching Plastic Straws Here s How They Are Replacing Them fortune com Retrieved 6 August 2018 a b c Graham Adam H May 2018 Bans on Plastic Straws Are Growing But Is the Travel Industry Doing Enough The New York Times Retrieved 6 August 2018 Burger King UK to Phase Out Plastic Straws and Commit to all Recyclable Packaging by 2025 One Green Planet www onegreenplanet org 12 June 2018 Retrieved 6 August 2018 Banning straws not enough to solve plastic pollution May warned Financial Times 20 April 2018 Wong Alice 1 April 2019 The Rise and Fall of the Plastic Straw Sucking in Crip Defiance Catalyst Feminism Theory Technoscience 5 1 1 12 doi 10 28968 cftt v5i1 30435 ISSN 2380 3312 Schwieterman Gail 1 January 2020 Water water everywhere Any to drink Conservation Physiology 8 1 coaa071 doi 10 1093 conphys coaa071 ISSN 2051 1434 PMC 7428448 PMID 32821393 Disabled People Are Not Part of the Conversation Advocates Speak Out Against Plastic Straw Bans Time Retrieved 20 January 2020 Vigdor Neil 11 July 2019 Fatal Accident With Metal Straw Highlights a Risk The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 20 January 2020 How business groups are fighting a wave of anti plastic straw laws NBC News March 2019 Retrieved 25 July 2019 Gabbatt Adam 29 July 2019 Trump re election campaign raises 460 000 from selling plastic straws The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 20 January 2020 Breuninger Kevin 19 July 2019 Trump s campaign offered 10 plastic straws for 15 because liberal paper straws don t work and they just sold out CNBC Retrieved 20 January 2020 Don Quixote tr Edith Grossman 2003 External links edit nbsp Look up drinking straw in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Drinking straws History of beer and bread and Sumerian straws How plastic drinking straws are made stopsucking campaign Archived 10 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en 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