Custom dictates that to correctly get pleasure from a premium whisky you pour it from an elaborately chunky crystal decanter into an unfeasibly heavy tumbler.
Weight has lengthy been an outward signifier of high quality within the whisky trade, and the luxurious trade usually, however this week, Johnnie Walker launched the world’s lightest glass whisky bottle, suggesting that the long run may be extra about slicing emissions that reduce glass.
At 180 grams (6.35 ounces), the teardrop formed 70-centiliter glass bottle is significantly lighter than the 850 grams of the present Johnnie Walker Blue Label bottle (with out the liquid and the stopper), coming in at one-fifth of the standard weight. It accommodates a limited-edition Johnnie Walker Blue Label Extremely whisky. The design has been 5 years within the making, and it breaks with the model’s conventional sq. bottle for the primary time.
Designed with the assistance of Turkish glassmakers Şişecam—an organization within the high 5 of glass producers globally—the brand new light-weight bottle has the potential to impression each transport and manufacturing emissions. Mother or father firm Diageo means that for each gram of glass lowered, round half a gram of carbon is saved in manufacturing. This doesn’t sound all that spectacular, however given Johnnie Walker sells an estimated 130 million bottles yearly, the carbon financial savings might, if upscaled, be appreciable.
For now, nonetheless, solely 888 bottles of the record-breaking Johnnie Walker Blue Label Extremely whisky might be launched, costing $1,250 every—which, as eco-statements go, feels slightly tokenistic. Restricted-edition spirit releases are commonplace within the premium sector, however for this innovation to make a significant impression it can should be applied throughout extra Diageo manufacturers.
At current, the light-weight bottles can’t be scaled up, however Jeremy Lindley, international design director at Diageo, tells WIRED that the corporate is already making use of the newfound light-weighting data to different bottles. “We have brought down the weight of the Johnnie Walker 18-year-old by 35 percent, and we’re working on reducing the weight of our standard Johnnie Walker Blue Label bottle by over 25 percent,” Lindley says.
Within the growth course of for the Johnnie Walker Blue Label Extremely, Diageo was granted 4 UK patents, and, in a laudable transfer, the license has been made out there on a royalty-free foundation to assist encourage different drinks manufacturers to innovate.