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In essence, a vending machine is an automated store. Products are placed into a machine and made typically always available for purchase. Freshly brewed beverages, bottles, cans, snacks, and fresh food are typical vending items. But it appears that there isn’t much of a cap on what can be sold these days.
In a vending machine, every item has a unique selection number or button. Customers pay their bill, select the button or item number that corresponds with it, and then they wait for their desired product to be delivered.
There are several different types of vending machines in use today. Freshly brewed hot beverages, cold cans of snacks, fresh filtered water, candies, fresh food, hot meals, and even non-edible goods can be included.
The Global Can and PET bottle vending machine market accounted for $XX Billion in 2021 and is anticipated to reach $XX Billion by 2030, registering a CAGR of XX% from 2022 to 2030.
With TOMRA M1’s introduction, smaller businesses now have a customised reverse vending solution for their constrained retail floor area.
The smallest reverse vending machine (RVM) on the market, the TOMRA M1 from worldwide reverse vending leader TOMRA Collection can recognise, sort, and store glass, plastic, and aluminium beverage containers all in one machine.
The solution is intended for small supermarkets and convenience stores with deposit return systems that accept different types and makes of drink containers.
Smaller retailers can take part in deposit return schemes and contribute to recycling thanks to TOMRA M1, which only needs 0.62 square metres of floor space.
The RVM is only 98 cm broad, 63 cm deep, and 165 cm tall when used alone. It can hold up to 270 PET bottles, 550 cans, and 80 glass bottles that have not been crushed.