Forever Ware's pitch to Namaste Cafe was simple: Use our reusable containers for your customers and cut down on disposable containers going to landfills.
So was the answer two years ago from Namaste owners Nadine Schaefer and Saujanya Shrestha. Sign us up.
Schaefer said she has searched for ways to decrease the amount of waste produced by Namaste — especially disposable containers — throughout its 17-year history.
"It's more for the good cause and the environment," she said.
For other users of Forever Ware, it's a reusable container option that also helps distinguish the business from competitors.
Forever Ware works this way: Restaurants and coffee shops pay between $25 and $200 a month to license Forever Ware's software that allows them to check out and track stainless steel containers and mugs that contain identification tags for tracking. Merchants also pay 5 cents per checkout. Customers, meanwhile, pay a $5 refundable fee to start using the containers that they can return (and check out new containers) at restaurants and coffee shops that also use Forever Ware.
Twin Cities entrepreneurs Nolan Singroy, Natasha Gaffer and Nick Krumholz, who started Forever in 2020, hope to expand the pool of users with the aid of $77,000 from Hennepin County, $7,000 from Carver County and $21,000 from Launch Minnesota, an initiative of the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development dedicated to supporting early-stage companies.
"Forever Ware's project filled a gap in our community," said Amy Maas, a waste reduction and recycling specialist and zero waste challenge coordinator for Hennepin County. "Some restaurants have reusable dishes within the restaurant, but the story changes when that food leaves the building for delivery or customers order to-go. A reuse system didn't exist. We liked the idea of a simple system that multiple restaurants could opt into to prevent takeout packaging waste, and especially single-use plastic items. We wanted to bring this to our residents and therefore funding innovators and early adopters could help make this a reality."