Air New Zealand is introducing edible coffee cups made from cookies.

The trial has been launched in a bid to reduce waste and will see the vanilla-flavored biscotti cups served both on board and in the airline’s airport lounges, Stuff reports.

http://instagr.am/p/B5oFLRZlA5a

The cups are made by sustainable New Zealand company Twiice and will be used not just for hot drinks but also in the place of bowls for desserts such as ice cream.

edible coffee cups 3

Foto: sourceStuff

The cups are simply made from wheat flour, sugar, egg, and vanilla essence, according to Twiice's website, and a six-pack of cups retails for $23 NZD ($15 USD).

According to Air New Zealand Lounge Leader Stratos Scanlan, the company serves about 600 coffees in its Auckland regional lounge on any given morning.

edible coffee cups 9

Foto: sourceStuff

"We've been working in partnership with innovative New Zealand company Twiice to explore the future of edible coffee cups," Air New Zealand customer experience manager Niki Chave told Stuff.

"Our current cups are compostable, but the ultimate goal would be to remove these totally from landfills."

edible coffee cups 5

Foto: sourceStuff

In July 2019, Air New Zealand announced it was rolling out plant-based coffee cups, getting rid of single-use plastic water bottles and plastic sauce sachets from its Business Premier and Premium Economy cabins, and is also gradually replacing plastic soft drink cups.

edible coffee cups 8

Foto: sourceStuff

Air New Zealand isn't the first company to introduce edible coffee cups - Italian coffee brand Lavazza, for example, started using them as far back as 2012.

Read more:

The most popular Starbucks Christmas drinks, ranked by calories

I drank coffee for a week after going my whole life without it, and I wasn't expecting the extra bathroom visits

Air New Zealand trolled a customer by repeatedly speaking in the Māori language, even though they said they didn't understand it