Campus Ideaz

Share your Ideas here. Be as descriptive as possible. Ask for feedback. If you find any interesting Idea, you can comment and encourage the person in taking it forward.

Every day, millions of disposable plastic spoons and forks are thrown away in hostels, cafeterias, and food outlets. These take hundreds of years to decompose, pollute the environment, and harm marine life.
 
 
Gaps in Current Solutions:
•Plastic cutlery: Cheap but harmful.
•Wooden/bamboo spoons: Eco-friendly but not always tasty, can splinter, and cost more.
•Biodegradable plastic: Still not widespread, often requires industrial composting facilities.
 
 
Proposed Solution: [Edible Spoons]
•Made from grains like millets, rice, corn, or wheat, baked into spoon shapes.
•Stay strong during use but can be eaten after the meal (crispy, flavored options).
•Even if not eaten, they naturally decompose within days, leaving no waste.
 
Who Benefits:
•Users (students/customers): A fun and eco-friendly alternative, plus an extra snack.
•Food vendors/hostels: Stand out as sustainable brands, reduce waste management costs.
•Community & Environment: Reduced single-use plastic, healthier planet.
 
Why This Problem Matters to Me:
I’ve seen the amount of plastic spoons and forks piling up after hostel mess hours or events. It made me realize how much waste is generated just from something used for 5 minutes. An edible spoon solves this in a practical and creative way.
 
Technical Details:
•Ingredients: Millet flour, rice flour, whole wheat, natural flavors (jeera, chocolate, vanilla).
•Durability: Withstands hot soups and curries for ~20–30 minutes.
•Shelf life: 6–9 months if stored dry.
•Cost: Around ₹10-12 per spoon at scale, competitive with wooden cutlery.
Votes: 11
E-mail me when people leave their comments –

You need to be a member of campusideaz to add comments!

Join campusideaz

Comments

  • Love the creativity here! Edible spoons make eating more interactive and enjoyable, while solving a real problem. Exploring local flavors could make them even more appealing to students.
  • Really nice idea bro keep working on it 👍
  • Your idea is a smart blend of sustainability and user experience — it solves a serious problem but also adds a fun twist (a snack!).
  • Your idea is creative, practical, and environmentally friendly, with clear benefits for users and vendors. Adding cost comparisons, scalability plans, and impact data would make it even stronger and more persuasive.
  • Innovative and eco-friendly idea that can significantly reduce single-use plastic waste.
  • “Great idea! Edible spoons are fun, eco-friendly, and practical. Maybe you can also explore different flavors to make them more exciting.”
  • Great idea also prevent micro plastic entering the body and helps achieve sustainable planet
  • Edible spoons are genius—eco-friendly, tasty, and a real fix for single-use plastic waste.
  • That’s a brilliant mix of sustainability and creativity—edible spoons directly tackle plastic waste while adding a fun, snackable twist. The practicality (durability, shelf life, cost) makes them highly viable for hostels and food outlets.
  • This is a fun, practical, and eco-friendly solution to plastic waste. If costs can be optimized and production scaled efficiently, edible cutlery could truly replace disposables in hostels and cafeterias. Partnering with campus mess and events would be a great way to test adoption early.
This reply was deleted.