Gentle readers, brace yourselves. Japan, that island of exquisite politeness and robot waiters, has unveiled its first zero-waste hub. The town of Kamikatsu, already famous for its fanatical recycling, has now achieved peak sanctimony.
I imagine the citizens spend their weekends sorting yogurt pots into 45 categories while wearing crisp white gloves and apologising to the compost heap. The hub itself, a gleaming temple to environmental virtue, promises to produce no landfill waste whatsoever. No really, not even a single, lonely crisp packet.
This is a place where the very concept of rubbish has been abolished. I half expected to see a sign declaring 'Rubbish is a state of mind. Transmute your guilt into sorted plastics.
' But of course, the Japanese have gone further. They have created a closed-loop system where every bottle, every banana peel, every broken bit of electronics is destined for a glorious reincarnation. There are machines that grind oyster shells into powder, stations for turning old kimonos into handbags, and facilities that somehow extract methane from your leftover rice.
It is breathtaking in its ambition and utterly terrifying in its intensity. For what is a zero-waste hub if not a monument to mankind's guilt over the simple act of existence? Every discarded wrapper is now a moral failing.
I can see the citizens now, clutching their barcoded rubbish bags with the solemnity of pallbearers. They carry their sorted refuse to the hub with the same reverence that a medieval peasant carried their tithes to the cathedral. But let us not mock the Japanese for their diligence.
They have achieved what the rest of us only pretend to do. They have stared into the abyss of their own consumption and built a recycling plant. Meanwhile, in my own kitchen, a single non-recyclable yoghurt pot sits in the bin like a traitor, quietly mocking my environmental apathy.
The hub is a triumph of human ingenuity, yes. But it is also a mirror, and the reflection is unflattering. So raise a glass of something ethically sourced to Kamikatsu.
They have built a utopia of sorted waste. The rest of us can only hope to be worthy of our own recycling bins.
