A vending machine in Tainan has become a popular attraction for people who enjoy taking photographs due to the unique way it dispenses its commodity — eggs.
Located on Yule Street (育樂街) near National Cheng Kung University, the machine unconventionally sells eggs, an arguably fragile item for a vending machine.
However, on Friday morning, the machine was completely sold out of the free-range eggs it dispenses using a built-in conveyor belt at NT$25 a pop.
Photo: Hung Jui-chin, Taipei Times
The vending machine’s popularity comes as the nation is facing a shortage of eggs due to an uptick in avian flu infections and large temperature swings last year, which resulted in a dip in Taiwan’s egg production.
The company behind the machine is Healthy Life: Chicken Can Help, an organization that partners with free-range chicken farms and environmentally friendly agricultural businesses.
The group’s founder, Yang Huan-ching (楊環靜), said that although NT$25 for an egg sounds steep, considering the process by which the eggs are farmed and the positive environmental awareness this kind of egg farming leaves, people realize the price is not excessive.
Although eggs usually use fewer resources to produce than livestock, most feeds used by chicken farmers in Taiwan have high carbon footprints, as they are imported from countries that likely adopt environmentally unfriendly practices to grow the crops, she said.
Under extreme climate change observed in recent years, it is not unreasonable to predict that the current shortage of eggs will become the norm if Taiwanese farms and consumers do not change their habits, she said.
Egg farms that partner with the movement raise their chickens in low-population-density environments that are physically and mentally healthy for poultry, Yang said.
Partners raise their chickens with locally sourced feeds that are manufactured through environmentally friendly means, she added.
An unforeseen issue that arose from having eggs farmed in this manner was the varying sizes of eggs, she said.
Once in the machine, some eggs get stuck on the conveyor belt because they are not uniform, but the issue can be fixed through simple adjustments, she said.
None of the eggs sold by the machine have been broken or cracked, cementing the benefits of the natural eggs, she said.
The machine has been installed for just over a year and had terrible sales in its early days, at its worst selling fewer than 30 eggs in one month, she said.
However, it recently saw a huge surge in popularity, causing it to run out of stock on a regular basis due to the egg shortage and people posting about it on social media, documenting the process of the eggs moving from the conveyor belt to the retrieval area — designed to emulate the experience of collecting eggs from a coop, she said.
Although it is difficult to break even with the vending machine, the main objective of the group is not profit, but to inspire and educate people on the importance of environmental protection, Yang said.
Three Taiwanese airlines have prohibited passengers from packing Bluetooth earbuds and their charger cases in checked luggage. EVA Air and Uni Air said that Bluetooth earbuds and charger cases are categorized as portable electronic devices, which should be switched off if they are placed in checked luggage based on international aviation safety regulations. They must not be in standby or sleep mode. However, as charging would continue when earbuds are placed in the charger cases, which would contravene international aviation regulations, their cases must be carried as hand luggage, they said. Tigerair Taiwan said that earbud charger cases are equipped
Foreign travelers entering Taiwan on a short layover via Taiwan Taoyuan International Airport are receiving NT$600 gift vouchers from yesterday, the Tourism Administration said, adding that it hopes the incentive would boost tourism consumption at the airport. The program, which allows travelers holding non-Taiwan passports who enter the country during a layover of up to 24 hours to claim a voucher, aims to promote attractions at the airport, the agency said in a statement on Friday. To participate, travelers must sign up on the campaign Web site, the agency said. They can then present their passport and boarding pass for their connecting international
Temperatures in northern Taiwan are forecast to reach as high as 30°C today, as an ongoing northeasterly seasonal wind system weakens, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said. CWA forecaster Tseng Chao-cheng (曾昭誠) said yesterday that with the seasonal wind system weakening, warmer easterly winds would boost the temperature today. Daytime temperatures in northern Taiwan and Yilan County are expected to range from 28°C to 30°C today, up about 3°C from yesterday, Tseng said. According to the CWA, temperature highs in central and southern Taiwan could stay stable. However, the weather is expected to turn cooler starting tonight as the northeasterly wind system strengthens again
Taiwan sweltered through its hottest October on record, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said yesterday, the latest in a string of global temperature records. The main island endured its highest average temperature since 1950, CWA forecaster Liu Pei-teng said. Temperatures the world over have soared in recent years as human-induced climate change contributes to ever more erratic weather patterns. Taiwan’s average temperature was 27.381°C as of Thursday, Liu said. Liu said the average could slip 0.1°C by the end of yesterday, but it would still be higher than the previous record of 27.009°C in 2016. "The temperature only started lowering around Oct. 18 or 19