Hawaii
After seeing Hawaii’s beaches littered with plastic, this islander built a company to make straws from seaweed
At Sunday Motor Co. Café in Madison, New Jersey, prospects are sampling the newest in biodegradable non-plastic utensils. Particularly, straws fabricated from seaweed.
The dispenser says, “Designed to Disappear,” which is strictly what the co-founder of sustainable start-up Loliware envisioned.
Chelsea Briganti, who goes by “Sea,” was born and raised in Hawaii, the place, as a baby, she remembered pristine shorelines.
“And I seen steadily through the years, as I obtained older, that there was a ton of plastic air pollution within the ocean and on the shoreline. And naturally, this had a big effect on me, watching that occur,” she mentioned.
That is why Brigani based Loliware in 2015, which began in Silicon Valley and in addition has an workplace in New York Metropolis.
“The triple planetary emergency is a critical one: That is plastic air pollution, local weather change and biodiversity loss, so we have made it our mission to handle this with sea know-how,” mentioned Briganti.
Loliware takes seaweed, mills it down after which combines it with colour, minerals, and water. The outcomes are seaweed-based pellets as an alternative of plastic pellets. These may be fed into an everyday plastic manufacturing machine to make utensils.
“Sea know-how is a aggressive know-how to exchange plastic at scale, as a result of it is excessive performing, price aggressive, scalable, and regenerative. So it is essentially the most sustainable various to plastic available on the market,” mentioned Briganti.
In an more and more aggressive market for plastic alternate options, Loliware’s straws appear to be passing the sip take a look at.
“I might take this over a paper straw as a result of this does not really feel soggy and it holds its texture,” mentioned Hetal Kothari, a buyer on the Sunday Motor Co Café. “I am vegetarian, so it makes it even, I assume, extra interesting to return to locations which have these sorts of choices.”
Renee and Vick Orderman, homeowners of the Sunday Motor Co Café, mentioned they selected the seaweed various after sampling some soggy paper alternate options. In addition they discovered the price, which may be very barely dearer than plastic, a plus.
“It is costly for small companies to decide on sustainable, eco-friendly merchandise, so we attempt to do no matter we are able to, and this was a type of gadgets,” mentioned Vick.
Loliware’s merchandise are aggressive in price as a result of they are often made on the identical gear as plastic. They work with Sinclair & Rush, headquartered in Arnold, Missouri, to fabricate their merchandise on current plastic molds. Whereas they’re making straws now, they count on to increase into different merchandise like cups. In addition they hope to make use of Sinclair & Rush’s worldwide manufacturing services to achieve abroad markets.
“Subsequent yr our new mannequin launches the place we basically provide sea know-how to all producers worldwide to exchange dozens if not a whole bunch of single use plastics subsequent yr,” mentioned Briganti.
Loliware’s largest buyer to this point is the Cornerstone Restaurant Group, however Briganti mentioned it’s including new companions rapidly. Backers embrace H/L Ventures, Metropolis Rock Enterprise Companions, Sustainable Ocean Alliance, Geekdom Fund, The Area Group and Sinclair & Rush. The corporate has raised simply over $12 million up to now.
Hawaii
Proposed empty homes tax gets exemptions added for Hawaii residents as final vote nears
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – A bill aimed at cracking down on vacant homes on Oahu by increasing taxes is expected to face a final vote at the Honolulu City Council in the coming weeks.
It comes after the proposal has been revised several times because of questions and concerns from the community.
Bill 46 would add an incremental 3% yearly tax for vacant dwellings on a property that would be rolled out over three years.
Some owners could end up paying tens of thousands of dollars more in property taxes, but a recent change to the measure adds exemptions for Hawaii residents.
The 2020 U.S. Census reported roughly 35,000 unoccupied housing units on Oahu.
Council Chair Tommy Waters, who introduced the bill, said it’s meant to get people to rent out or otherwise free up their unused units.
Under the measure’s current language, the higher tax would be placed on homes that are unoccupied for six months.
“We’re trying to get creative to figure out how we can get our local people to stay here. We can’t build our way out of this solution,” said Waters.
This week, the council’s budget committee narrowly passed the bill in a 3 to 2 vote after making several changes.
One change would allow Hawaii residents to request an exemption for a second home they own.
To reduce administrative costs that would likely come with a new tax, the bill proposed it to operate under the already running property tax system by adding a new class.
There’s also changes to the bill’s language to comply with both with state and federal law to try and avoid potential lawsuits.
But still some residents still believe it will do more harm than good.
“Trying to enforce this and make sure that it’s equitable is going to be a nightmare,” said Hawaii Kai resident Natalie Iwasa.
“My other concern about this is the landlords, they obviously have a stake in this but if they miss a deadline, it is no skin on their backs you know why? Because they will increase the rent for people like me and other families who cannot afford a home,” she added.
But younger constituents seem to support the proposal.
“This is not about punishing anyone. It is about making housing accessible to the people who call Hawaii their home,” said one testifier.
Bill 46 could still undergo even more revisions.
The bill is expected to go for a final vote on December 11, where public input will also be taken.
Copyright 2024 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
Hawaii
Kauai shines in farm-to-table experiences at Timbers resort
HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) – If you’re headed to Kaua’i and looking for a unique farm-to-table experience, Hualani‘s at Timbers Kaua’i serves creative dishes and drinks made with local ingredients and hyper seasonal produce grown on their farm at Hokuala.
Alex Amorin, executive chef at Hualani‘s, and Cory Dotario, Timbers food and beverage director, joined HNN’s Sunrise to talk about their fresh, sustainable philosophy and upcoming Ha’aheo o Kauaʻi events, meaning “pride of Kauai” because talent and ingredients are sourced from the Garden Isle.
Among their signatures: honeycomb and goat cheese salad with a lemon vinaigrette (tapping into fall citrus season on their farm and honey from their own apiary) and a Barrel Aged Old Fashioned using their signature “Nagao of Never” bourbon named after a longtime employee, David Nagao, as a way to usher in the holiday season.
Ha’aheo o Kauaʻi lets guests enjoy a hands-on harvesting experience at The Farm at Hokuala and learn about Kauai produce, seafood and meats, and wine pairings.
Amorin talked about the farm’s organic and biodynamic practices.
“There’s a nuanced beauty to selecting produce in its prime seasonality. The delicate flavor profiles take artistry to celebrate and enhance as the star of the plate. Similar to the artistry of working with watercolors and the delicate skillset that’s involved with mixing paint colors, working with vegetable-forward dishes takes the same approach and it’s ingredients sourced at peak ripeness that allow me to create culinary works of art,” said Amorin, an avid waterman and fisherman.
The next Ha’aheo o Kauaʻi farm-to-table dinner is on December 19 and can be booked on Open Table or by calling (808) 320-7399.
For more information, visit timberskauai.com/eat-drink/hualanis or follow on Instagram @timberskauai.
Copyright 2024 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.
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