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Posts with term Santa Fe Natural Tobacco X

Municipalities Look to Reduce Toxic Waste by Recycling Cigarette Butts

The city, along with its Downtown Development District and New Jersey-based recycler TerraCycle, installed 50 new cigarette-recycling receptacles on several downtown blocks. TerraCycle, which uses difficult-to-recycle products in its process, has a nationwide program, along with New Orleans and other cities, that recycles cigarette butts into plastic pellets later used to make products, such as industrial pallets.

These Cities are Trading in Cigarette Butts for Cash

But as harmful to the environment as they can be (they’re made from a form of plastic that doesn’t degrade easily), butts are recyclable, which is why some cities across the country are tapping a national, mail-in recycling program to eliminate cigarette waste. Salem, Mass., and New Orleans are two such communities that have partnered with TerraCycle,a New Jersey-based company that pays by the pound for cigarette waste.

Mission Possible: Recycling: How do we go beyond 'easy'?

What happens to your garbage? Ninety-nine percent of the total material flow in the U.S. becomes garbage within six months. That's a lot of waste! For recyclables, many municipalities have the infrastructure to process and re-purpose it. Non-recyclable materials are sent to landfills or incinerators. Garbage that is recycled goes to a processing plant and is converted into new raw materials to make new products. This not only eliminates the negative effects of land filling/incinerating it, but processing garbage into new raw material releases fewer emissions than producing new materials. Why are some materials non-recyclable? Technically, "non-recyclable" materials can be recycled. However, these materials must be collected, sorted and processed differently than what we consider traditionally recyclable materials, which are really just the most easily recyclable — glass, metal, paper and some plastic. How do we go beyond what is easy? In 2001, Tom Szaky, then a 19-year-old Princeton student, accomplished his first major coup against the major environmental issue of "waste." While the intervening successes are amazing, to stay on target, fast forward seven years. In January 2008, Szaky, as TerraCycle founder and CEO, went corporate with "sponsored waste." TerraCycle began partnering with consumer packaged goods manufacturers to administer free programs for consumers to help collect non-recyclable packaging, which is then upcycled or recycled into eco-friendly products. New Mexico-based Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Co., for instance, is the corporate sponsor for the recycling of cigarette butts into pellets. Rebates for consumer collecting are sent directly to the participants' designated non-profit. Currently, participating nations include Argentina, Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Denmark, Germany, Hungary, Ireland, Israel, Japan, Mexico, the Netherlands, Norway, Puerto Rico, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Note: in 2013, reports detailed that in Sweden, people are so diligent about recycling that just 4 percent of all trash ends up in landfills. (Please reread paragraph one before continuing.) As of June 2014, the following stats appear on the TerraCycle website. People collecting trash: 41,813,394 Waste units collected: 2,601,688,712 Money to nonprofits: $6,667,938.12 Coyote Howling's TerraCycle campaign has already logged 24,910 units of cigarette waste. (Thanks, Gabe, for the encouragement to take on this specific collection brigade!) Another flourishing Brigade is cheese packaging for which we have logged 7,679 units. A standing ovation to Pizza Hut and Schlotzsky's for bringing in their weekly collections of cheese packaging! Are you one of the people collecting Terracycle? If not, why not? Easier to just throw things away? Let's go beyond easy! Add your name, church, business or organization to the growing list of TerraCyclers! To check out what counts for TerraCycle, review the details at www.CoyoteHowlingShopForaCause.com, or visit Coyote Howling and learn how to take your trash back from the landfills and use it to fund meals for children. Coyote Howling's designated nonprofit: Feed My Starving Children. Tonya Huber, PhD, is founder and owner of Coyote Howling Shop for a Cause Contact her at CoyoteHowlingNM@gmail.com 575-808-8320.

Don’t toss that butt!

TerraCycle, of Trenton, N.J., was founded in 2001 by its CEO Tom Szaky and began by selling liquid fertilizer made from worm waste products in reused containers. The company quickly grew into a business that specializes in making consumer products from pre- and post-consumer waste in a process known as “upcycling.” For products that cannot be reused or turned into another product, the company recycles the waste and makes something completely new out of it. In addition to cigarette butts, TerraCycle also recycles used gum and diapers.

Bitucas e chicletes têm novo destino

Se já é um longo caminho fazer com que uma embalagem plástica retorne à indústria como matéria-prima, parece impensável fazer com que rejeitos como gomas de mascar usadas e bitucas de cigarro tenham uma destinação ambientalmente correta. É nessas novas fronteiras da reciclagem e do reaproveitamento de resíduos que a operação global da TerraCycle vem trabalhando.

Recycle 'em if you got 'em: TerraCycle launches cigarette waste collection program

From glue sticks to flip-flops, TerraCycle embraces hard-to-recycle waste with open arms. And with a new collection scheme, the company is taking on the country's most pervasive type of litter: Cigarette butts.

If you’re at all familiar with “waste solution development” firm TerraCycle, you’re probably well aware that the New Jersey-headquartered company largely, but not exclusively, collects difficult-to-recycle trashof the PG-rated, lunchbox-friendly variety: Plastic Lunchables trays and lids, Capri Sun drink pouches, M&M wrappers, plastic yogurt cups, string cheese packaging, and the like.
You’re also probably aware that a heft of the upcycled products designed and sold by the company — backpacks pencil cases, spiral bound notebooks, etc. — are kid- and classroom-friendly. This all makes perfect sense given that TerraCycle’s popular Brigades trash collection programs are often instituted as fundraisers at schools across the country.
That said, the steady flow of trash entering TerraCycle’s main collection warehouse in Trenton and other warehouses across the country is decidedly not of the adults-only variety (save for the Wine Pouch Brigade). And unless you count candy bar wrappers, there hasn’t been a whole lot of vice-centric or eyebrow-raising recycling going on within the wonderful world of TerraCycle — no empty whisky bottles, old issues of Penthouse, sex toys, glass bongs, beer cans.
Until now.
Following the launch of a similar program in Canada earlier this year, TerraCycle has kicked off its first Brigade trash collection scheme in the U.S., a scheme that focuses on both litter removal and landfill avoidance, in which potential recyclers must be 21 and over to participate (and to even access the Brigade homepage).
The form of waste involved that warrants an age restriction?
Cigarette butts and other forms of tobacco-related waste.
Launched with the sponsorship of tobacco manufacturer the Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Company, the Cigarette Brigade allows participants to recycle butts, filters, half-smoked cigarettes, rolling papers, loose tobacco pouches, and the plastic outer wrap and inner foil found in cigarette boxes. Cigarette ash, yes, ash, is accepted as well. Cardboard cigarette boxes and cartons are not accepted, however, as those can be recycled on a local level.
The Cigarette Brigade, a program open to tobacco-using individuals, bar and restaurant owners, building managers, and litter clean-up groups, works much like other TerraCycle Brigade programs: Once a sizable amount of waste is collected by a participant, it is emptied into a plastic bag (True, cigarette butts aren't exactly most of us would want to hoard in a bunch of plastic baggies for a length of time). Participants then place the bag (s), which is later recycled by TerraCycle, in a box before shipping it to the company using a free prepaid UPS shipping label accessed through an online TerraCycle account. Unlike the Canadian Cigarette Brigade that offers 100 TerraCycle points per pound of waste collected, there is currently not a charitable point-incentive program attached to its U.S. counterpart.
Obviously, TerraCycle doesn’t plan on making pencil cases or tote bags out of several ashtrays-full of cigarette butts (although I did spot a cigarette butt picture frame during my tour of TerraCycle HQ last month) and selling them to consumers. Instead, the waste will be used to create industrial products such as plastic pallets while any remaining tobacco will be used in tobacco composting efforts.
In case you were curious, the Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Company, a division of Reynolds American, is the manufacturer of Natural American Spirit brand cigarettes. Obviously, American Spirits aren’t healthier or any less damaging than a pack of Pall Malls or what have you. They still do a body not-very-good. However, a “natural” brand that offers additive-free, organic and 100 percent American grown varieties decidedly lends itself better to recycling efforts than other Reynolds-owned subsidiaries such as Camel.
Says Cressida Lozano, head of marketing and sales for the Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Company in a recent press release:
You don’t have to walk or drive very far to see that smokers often discard cigarette waste in ways that litter the environment. Our company has been committed to environmental sustainability since we were founded 30 years ago, and we’re proud to be the exclusive sponsor of an innovative program to reduce and recycle cigarette butt litter, regardless of which manufacturer made the cigarettes.
And on the topic of cigarette butt litter, Keep America Beautiful states that 65 percent of cigarette butts are disposed of improperly. Additionally, tobacco waste is the number one item recovered during the Ocean Conservancy’s annual International Coastal Cleanup Day — a staggering 52 million cigarette filters have been collected from beaches over the past 25 years.  And even when non-biodegradable cigarette butts are disposed of “properly” — i.e. deposited into an ashtray and then into the trash — they continue to live a long, prosperous life within landfills where they leach toxins into the ground. It’s a less eyesore-inducing alternative to litter, but not much better.
TerraCycle’s stateside Cigarette Brigade program, like its Canadian counterpart, may garner some controversy due to the involvement of a major tobacco company. Still, I think the program — the first of its kind — is certainly warranted. I'm all for it. TerraCycle, a company deeply committed to recycling items that may be deemed by some, as founder/CEO Tom Szaky puts it, as “worthless and unsavoury,” is simply offering smokers and clean-up organizations a vehicle in which to safely dispose of a pervasive, unsightly, and all around nasty form of waste.

Recycle 'em if you got 'em: TerraCycle launches cigarette waste collection program

From glue sticks to flip-flops, TerraCycle embraces hard-to-recycle waste with open arms. And with a new collection scheme, the company is taking on the country's most pervasive type of litter: Cigarette butts.

If you’re at all familiar with “waste solution development” firm TerraCycle, you’re probably well aware that the New Jersey-headquartered company largely, but not exclusively, collects difficult-to-recycle trashof the PG-rated, lunchbox-friendly variety: Plastic Lunchables trays and lids, Capri Sun drink pouches, M&M wrappers, plastic yogurt cups, string cheese packaging, and the like.
You’re also probably aware that a heft of the upcycled products designed and sold by the company — backpacks pencil cases, spiral bound notebooks, etc. — are kid- and classroom-friendly. This all makes perfect sense given that TerraCycle’s popular Brigades trash collection programs are often instituted as fundraisers at schools across the country.
That said, the steady flow of trash entering TerraCycle’s main collection warehouse in Trenton and other warehouses across the country is decidedly not of the adults-only variety (save for the Wine Pouch Brigade). And unless you count candy bar wrappers, there hasn’t been a whole lot of vice-centric or eyebrow-raising recycling going on within the wonderful world of TerraCycle — no empty whisky bottles, old issues of Penthouse, sex toys, glass bongs, beer cans.
Until now.
Following the launch of a similar program in Canada earlier this year, TerraCycle has kicked off its first Brigade trash collection scheme in the U.S., a scheme that focuses on both litter removal and landfill avoidance, in which potential recyclers must be 21 and over to participate (and to even access the Brigade homepage).
The form of waste involved that warrants an age restriction?
Cigarette butts and other forms of tobacco-related waste.
Launched with the sponsorship of tobacco manufacturer the Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Company, the Cigarette Brigade allows participants to recycle butts, filters, half-smoked cigarettes, rolling papers, loose tobacco pouches, and the plastic outer wrap and inner foil found in cigarette boxes. Cigarette ash, yes, ash, is accepted as well. Cardboard cigarette boxes and cartons are not accepted, however, as those can be recycled on a local level.
The Cigarette Brigade, a program open to tobacco-using individuals, bar and restaurant owners, building managers, and litter clean-up groups, works much like other TerraCycle Brigade programs: Once a sizable amount of waste is collected by a participant, it is emptied into a plastic bag (True, cigarette butts aren't exactly most of us would want to hoard in a bunch of plastic baggies for a length of time). Participants then place the bag (s), which is later recycled by TerraCycle, in a box before shipping it to the company using a free prepaid UPS shipping label accessed through an online TerraCycle account. Unlike the Canadian Cigarette Brigade that offers 100 TerraCycle points per pound of waste collected, there is currently not a charitable point-incentive program attached to its U.S. counterpart.
Obviously, TerraCycle doesn’t plan on making pencil cases or tote bags out of several ashtrays-full of cigarette butts (although I did spot a cigarette butt picture frame during my tour of TerraCycle HQ last month) and selling them to consumers. Instead, the waste will be used to create industrial products such as plastic pallets while any remaining tobacco will be used in tobacco composting efforts.
In case you were curious, the Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Company, a division of Reynolds American, is the manufacturer of Natural American Spirit brand cigarettes. Obviously, American Spirits aren’t healthier or any less damaging than a pack of Pall Malls or what have you. They still do a body not-very-good. However, a “natural” brand that offers additive-free, organic and 100 percent American grown varieties decidedly lends itself better to recycling efforts than other Reynolds-owned subsidiaries such as Camel.
Says Cressida Lozano, head of marketing and sales for the Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Company in a recent press release:
You don’t have to walk or drive very far to see that smokers often discard cigarette waste in ways that litter the environment. Our company has been committed to environmental sustainability since we were founded 30 years ago, and we’re proud to be the exclusive sponsor of an innovative program to reduce and recycle cigarette butt litter, regardless of which manufacturer made the cigarettes.
And on the topic of cigarette butt litter, Keep America Beautiful states that 65 percent of cigarette butts are disposed of improperly. Additionally, tobacco waste is the number one item recovered during the Ocean Conservancy’s annual International Coastal Cleanup Day — a staggering 52 million cigarette filters have been collected from beaches over the past 25 years.  And even when non-biodegradable cigarette butts are disposed of “properly” — i.e. deposited into an ashtray and then into the trash — they continue to live a long, prosperous life within landfills where they leach toxins into the ground. It’s a less eyesore-inducing alternative to litter, but not much better.
TerraCycle’s stateside Cigarette Brigade program, like its Canadian counterpart, may garner some controversy due to the involvement of a major tobacco company. Still, I think the program — the first of its kind — is certainly warranted. I'm all for it. TerraCycle, a company deeply committed to recycling items that may be deemed by some, as founder/CEO Tom Szaky puts it, as “worthless and unsavoury,” is simply offering smokers and clean-up organizations a vehicle in which to safely dispose of a pervasive, unsightly, and all around nasty form of waste.

Smokers, Take Heed: You Can Now Recycle Your Cigarette Butts

Forget about second-hand smoke; one company wants your second-hand cigarette butts.
A new company has developed a method to get cigarette butts off San Francisco beaches and out of landfills by "upcycling" them into pellets, which will then be used to make plastic shipping pallets and other industrial products.
  TerraCycle, a company that specializes in upcycling hard-to-recycle materials, has joined forces with San Diego based nonprofit RippleLife in an effort to repurpose cigarette filters. The effort is sponsored by Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Company, which apparently wants to do its part to keep its hipster customers from littering up cool, gentrifying neighborhoods nationwide.   Funded by donations, RippleLife became one of the first grassroots organizations to offer incentives to recycle cigarette butts 18 months ago, but they didn't know what to do with all the butts they collected. Enter TerraCycle, which now offers a way to recycle large quantities of butts by turning them into plastic.   Contrary to popular belief, cigarettes aren't biodegradable because of their filters, which are made of cellulose acetate. It is this acetate that is upcycled into plastic shipping pallets, says Stacey Krauss, TerraCycle's spokeswoman.   "This issue is way more enormous than I ever thought," says Chris Baffico, founder of RippleLife. "If you could show up and clean up 2,000 butts and five or six days later they were right back, you'd see what I mean."   Cigarette butts are some of the most commonly littered materials, with 65 percent of them not making it into trash cans, according to Keep America Beautiful.   "You don't have to walk or drive very far to see that smokers often discard cigarette waste in ways that litter the environment," says Cressida Lozano, head of sales and marketing for SFNTC.   Anyone can participate in this recycling campaign: simply collect the butts in a plastic bag, put that bag in a shipping box, and mail it off to Terracycle. But, as with any new initiative: Will people actually do it?   Terracycle's next coup: Turning dirty diapers into park benches. No kidding.