EcoCreds (@ecocreds) 's Twitter Profile
EcoCreds

@ecocreds

Open RWA Marketplace for tokenized environmental credits | 🤝 Uniting individuals, brands, and WMOs for a cleaner planet 🌎

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linkhttps://ecocreds.com/ calendar_today16-05-2023 17:05:35

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Every “eco” product that comes shrink-wrapped in non-recyclable plastic is a lie with better branding. Green labels don’t matter. Waste recovery does.

EcoCreds (@ecocreds) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Plantation drives make us feel good. But they rarely do good. Here’s why tree-planting isn’t the climate solution you think it is 👇 🎥 Full video on YouTube: youtu.be/fEGEmioPq8Y

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Plastic isn’t the enemy. Designing it with no exit strategy is. If it’s used once but lasts 300 years, Then it's environmental vandalism disguised as utility.

Plastic isn’t the enemy. 

Designing it with no exit strategy is.

If it’s used once but lasts 300 years, 

Then it's environmental vandalism disguised as utility.
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Governments love banning plastic items. Until you ask to supervise the people profiting from it. Banning straws ≠ is solving the plastic crisis. We need systems to track and recycle it.

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Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) sounds great. Until you realize most brands use it to tick boxes. not to sponsor actual recovery. Plastic accountability isn’t optional. It should be a fight.

Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) sounds great.

Until you realize most brands use it to tick boxes.

not to sponsor actual recovery.

Plastic accountability isn’t optional. It should be a fight.
EcoCreds (@ecocreds) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Plastic products are designed to be sold, not to “end safely.” No plan for after-use. No accountability for waste. Just marketing, margins, and landfill.

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Waste pickers recover up to 60% of plastic waste in South Asia. They do more for the planet than all corporations combined. Without any safety gear, pay, or recognition. Let that sink in.

Waste pickers recover up to 60% of plastic waste in South Asia.

They do more for the planet than all corporations combined.

Without any safety gear, pay, or recognition.

Let that sink in.
EcoCreds (@ecocreds) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Plastic waste is a supply chain problem. Oil companies produce it. Retailers wrap products in it. E-commerce ships it across the world. Then it ends up burned in rural towns. Everyone at the top makes a profit. Everyone at the bottom pays the price.

EcoCreds (@ecocreds) 's Twitter Profile Photo

We don’t talk enough about how overconsumption fuels plastic waste. Fast fashion. Hauls. Trend shopping. Return gift favors. Plastic is in everything, and most of it becomes trash in under 3 weeks.

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EcoCreds x Aylab Traffic meets transformation. We’re proud to team up with Aylab, the programmatic Web3 ad network behind Gamifly and the new Aylab Traffic Loop (ATL). With 3M+ installs and 50M+ on-chain actions, Aylab is leading Web3 user acquisition at scale. Now, with

EcoCreds x <a href="/Aylab_io/">Aylab</a> 

Traffic meets transformation.

We’re proud to team up with Aylab, the programmatic Web3 ad network behind Gamifly and the new Aylab Traffic Loop (ATL).

With 3M+ installs and 50M+ on-chain actions, Aylab is leading Web3 user acquisition at scale. Now, with
EcoCreds (@ecocreds) 's Twitter Profile Photo

“Treat yourself” culture comes with a landfill. With every influencer drop to holiday merch, we’re drowning in plastic, packaged as joy.

EcoCreds (@ecocreds) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The real carbon footprint isn’t just in the product. It’s also how it’s packaged. How far did it travel? How long has it sat on shelves? And where the waste ends up. Your water bottle didn’t just ship here alone; its waste did too.

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We built a global economy where: – The rich create the mess – The poor clean it up – And neither gets credit for their deeds Only verified, compensated recovery can fix that.

EcoCreds (@ecocreds) 's Twitter Profile Photo

We love to buy. We love to unbox. We rarely ask what happens next. Fast fashion, haul culture, gifting rituals... wrapped in plastic, trashed in weeks.

EcoCreds (@ecocreds) 's Twitter Profile Photo

You’re not a bad person for using plastic. You’re stuck in a system designed to leave you no choice. Real climate action shouldn’t be guilt-driven, but infrastructure-backed. EcoCreds is here to change that — with proof, not promises.

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We don't just have a plastic problem. We also have a proof problem. Most brands say they recycle, but can’t show where their waste goes. Consumers sort their trash, but never know what happens after the bin. EcoCreds changes that.

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Plastic is cheap for the people who make it. But expensive for the people who live with its aftermath. The cost is not financial. It's air quality, water safety, and soil health.

EcoCreds (@ecocreds) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Modern shipping is built to move plastic anywhere in the world. But no one built a system to bring it back. Global supply chains export the product and dump the responsibility somewhere else.

EcoCreds (@ecocreds) 's Twitter Profile Photo

We call it "consumer culture." But there’s nothing cultural about it. It’s engineered. It’s scaled. It’s incentivized. Consumerism isn’t an accident. It’s a business model.

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The most polluted regions don’t even produce the waste. Still, they have to live with it. The global supply chain treats them as dump zones for someone else’s trash.

The most polluted regions don’t even produce the waste.

Still, they have to live with it.

The global supply chain treats them as dump zones for someone else’s trash.