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ELIMINATING THE IDEA OF WASTE®

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How TerraCycle is making an impact on waste management during COVID-19

TerraCycle is a company built on the goal of "eliminating the idea of waste" by making that which is non-recyclable, recyclable. From coffee pods and pet food bags, to cigarette butts and PPE, TerraCycle collects and recycles a wide range of waste types.
Partnering with both individual consumers and major corporations, the company's Zero Waste Box system allows consumers to fill a themed collection box with otherwise hard-to-recycle used materials and packaging in a convenient retail location, and send it back to TerraCycle via a prepaid return label. This previously non-recyclable waste is then processed to recover its value - whether through refurbishment and reuse, up-cycling or recycling.

20 pledges for 2020: How to recycle non-recyclable beauty products

Truly ethical and sustainable beauty brands aren't easy to find. Can Jessica Jones go a whole year without using anything else? From body scrub to hand cream, choose toiletries with ethically sourced ingredients Zero waste products might be the future of clean beauty but they have yet to reach the mainstream. The lack of accessibility and convenience when purchasing zero waste items means that it is significantly easier to just buy non-recyclable products.   When switching to sustainable beauty I found that I had many products which I needed to use up before searching for better alternatives. These were mostly half used makeup items in non-recyclable packaging, often with different parts and materials such as a mascara wand or a foundation pump, which makes it impossible to recycle them in local council bins.   Introducing TerraCycle.   TerraCycle is a recycling scheme for waste that cannot easily be recycled. Founded by Tom Szaky in 2001, who was then a student, the concept is simple: free recycling programmes are funded by worldwide brands, manufacturers and retailers in order to allow us to collect and recycle our hard-to-recycle waste. All you have to do is pick the programmes you want to use, collect waste in your home, school, office or organisation, download a free shipping label and finally, send your waste in to be recycled. Points are earned and can be exchanged for rewards for your school or a non-profit. Tom Szaky, founder of TerraCycle Tom Szaky, founder of TerraCycle(TerraCycle)   Since it was established, TerraCycle has rapidly become a global leader in recycling and to date, over 202 million people in 21 countries have collected billions of pieces of waste, raising more than 44 million dollars for charities all over the world.   TerraCycle is not just for makeup and personal care products; there are programmes designed for almost every kind of waste from bread bags and empty medicine packets to childrens’ toys and disposable gloves. The ones I was most interested in were the Garnier personal care and beauty recycling programme and the Maybelline makeup recycling programme.   Although the names suggest that only Garnier and Maybelline products can be recycled, they actually accept waste from all brands. The Garnier programme allows waste to be sent in however the Maybelline programme works slightly differently, yet is still free and easy. All you have to do is find your closest store through their maps and drop off your empty (clean) packaging to be recycled.   Once your empty waste has been received it is sorted by material type, shredded and pressed into plastic pellets, which can then be reused for various new plastic products. Recycling waste earns points that are redeemed as financial donations so the more waste that is recycled, the more that is donated to various charities such as Mind. Beauty brands such as Weleda, Baylis & Harding and Colgate also have their own individual recycling schemes.   TerraCycle is a revolutionary way of recycling, reusing and upcycling waste to prevent it being incinerated, which produces huge amounts of pollution, or landfilled, which generates the high levels of methane gas and CO2 that contribute to global warming. Waste is redirected from a linear system with a finite end to a circular one, which keeps it flowing in our economy.

20 pledges for 2020: How to recycle non-recyclable beauty products

From body scrub to hand cream, choose toiletries with ethically sourced ingredients Zero waste products might be the future of clean beauty but they have yet to reach the mainstream. The lack of accessibility and convenience when purchasing zero waste items means that it is significantly easier to just buy non-recyclable products. When switching to sustainable beauty I found that I had many products which I needed to use up before searching for better alternatives. These were mostly half used makeup items in non-recyclable packaging, often with different parts and materials such as a mascara wand or a foundation pump, which makes it impossible to recycle them in local council bins. Introducing TerraCycle. TerraCycle is a recycling scheme for waste that cannot easily be recycled. Founded by Tom Szaky in 2001, who was then a student, the concept is simple: free recycling programmes are funded by worldwide brands, manufacturers and retailers in order to allow us to collect and recycle our hard-to-recycle waste. All you have to do is pick the programmes you want to use, collect waste in your home, school, office or organisation, download a free shipping label and finally, send your waste in to be recycled. Points are earned and can be exchanged for rewards for your school or a non-profit. Tom Szaky, founder of TerraCycle Tom Szaky, founder of TerraCycle(TerraCycle) Since it was established, TerraCycle has rapidly become a global leader in recycling and to date, over 202 million people in 21 countries have collected billions of pieces of waste, raising more than 44 million dollars for charities all over the world. TerraCycle is not just for makeup and personal care products; there are programmes designed for almost every kind of waste from bread bags and empty medicine packets to childrens’ toys and disposable gloves. The ones I was most interested in were the Garnier personal care and beauty recycling programme and the Maybelline makeup recycling programme. Although the names suggest that only Garnier and Maybelline products can be recycled, they actually accept waste from all brands. The Garnier programme allows waste to be sent in however the Maybelline programme works slightly differently, yet is still free and easy. All you have to do is find your closest store through their maps and drop off your empty (clean) packaging to be recycled. Once your empty waste has been received it is sorted by material type, shredded and pressed into plastic pellets, which can then be reused for various new plastic products. Recycling waste earns points that are redeemed as financial donations so the more waste that is recycled, the more that is donated to various charities such as Mind. Beauty brands such as Weleda, Baylis & Harding and Colgate also have their own individual recycling schemes. TerraCycle is a revolutionary way of recycling, reusing and upcycling waste to prevent it being incinerated, which produces huge amounts of pollution, or landfilled, which generates the high levels of methane gas and CO2 that contribute to global warming. Waste is redirected from a linear system with a finite end to a circular one, which keeps it flowing in our economy.

New York Circular City Initiative Announces Vision to Grow 11,000 Jobs and Reduce Waste to Zero

Freshfields convenes multi-stakeholder coalition that identifies measures to support City’s COVID-19 recovery and transition to circular economy NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--A new report and vision issued by the New York Circular City Initiative recommends a series of measures to the City, its businesses and financial institutions to accelerate the creation of a circular economy in New York, which will support the recovery from COVID-19, help catalyze thousands of jobs and maximize resource use while minimizing waste. Convened by leading international law firm Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP (“Freshfields”), the New York Circular City Initiative is a coalition of leaders from the mayor’s office, city agencies, multinational corporations, foundations and academic institutions excited to reimagine the way New York’s economy works.

“Circularity—and the economic recovery—requires creative multi-sector collaboration, which is why the New York Circular City Initiative is such an important and powerful vehicle for change”

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Complex Challenges, Circular Solutions offers a new vision for the future and provides a roadmap for establishing a circular economy in which no waste is sent to landfill, environmental pollution is minimized, and thousands of well-paid jobs across a wide range of skill levels and all social and racial backgrounds are created through the intelligent use and re-use of products and raw materials. The plan has three important goals, to:
  • Highlight job creation opportunities for as many as 11,000 jobs
  • Deliver over $11 billion in economic benefits
  • Reduce waste to zero by 2030.
The report identifies 10 key levers through which business, government and society can drive the shift to circularity: Markets, Procurement, Extended Producer Responsibility, Jobs, Planning, Finance, Policy, Innovation, Communication, and Education. Specific recommendations range from policy measures and procurement guidelines to the creation of circular materials markets. The plan also calls on 2021 mayoral candidates to support the group’s vision for accelerating the city’s transition to a circular economy. Aided by the compelling approach and ideas in the plan, Freshfields has brought together stakeholders across a range of industries and both the public and private sectors, including:
  • Arup
  • BSR
  • Circle Economy
  • Cisco Systems
  • Closed Loop Partners
  • Ellen Macarthur Foundation
  • Goldman Sachs
  • H&M
  • HSBC
  • Ideo
  • ING
  • NYC Economic Development Corporation
  • NYC Mayor's Office for Climate Change
  • Danish Cleantech Hub
  • Queen of Raw
  • Recycling Partnership
  • SIMS
  • Stern NYU
  • TerraCycle
  • Unilever
“The global economy has operated under a linear model for centuries, but with increasingly scarce resources, rapidly changing climate, an ever-expanding population, and a global pandemic that has had a devastating effect on our lives, health and livelihoods, we need to rethink this linear approach,” said Oliver Dudok van Heel, Freshfields’ Head of Client Sustainability and Environment and the lead author of the report. “A circular system will create a New York City that is thriving, green and just. By applying this thinking across other cities, which consume 78 percent of the world’s energy and produce 60 percent of its emissions, this would lead to a significant reduction in humanity’s environmental footprint.” “Building a more circular economy means a stronger and more sustainable future for New York City,” said James Patchett, President and CEO of New York City Economic Development Corporation. “When we strengthen our supply chains and more effectively use resources, we are not only spurring innovation and economic activity, we are reducing our environmental impact too. As the City continues to focus on its long-term economic recovery and success, initiatives like these have an important role to play.” In conjunction with the proposal released today, Dudok van Heel and Timothy Wilkins, Freshfields’ Global Partner for Client Sustainability, will present key findings of the group’s research during a public webinar hosted by the firm. The online event will feature an expert panel of senior executives making the case for a circular economy for New York City and sharing sustainability initiatives being implemented by their respective organizations. Speakers include:
  • Joey Bergstein, CEO, Seventh Generation and Unilever North America Home Care Lead
  • Kate Daly, Managing Director, Center for the Circular Economy, Closed Loop Partners
  • Joke Dufourmont, Lead, Circular Jobs Initiative, Circle Economy
  • James Patchett, President and CEO, NYC Economic Development Corporation
  • Tom Szaky, CEO and Founder, TerraCycle
“Circularity—and the economic recovery—requires creative multi-sector collaboration, which is why the New York Circular City Initiative is such an important and powerful vehicle for change,” said Wilkins. “We have reached a pivotal moment in our society’s history, where decisions made today will determine the fate and direction of our future.” The full report is available for download here. A summary of the report is available here. The live webinar can be viewed here. For more information on the New York Circular City Initiative, please visit www.circularnyc.org. About Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP Freshfields Bruckhaus Deringer LLP is a global law firm with a long-standing track record of successfully supporting the world's leading national and multinational corporations, financial institutions and governments on groundbreaking and business-critical mandates. Our 2,800-plus lawyers deliver results worldwide through our own offices and alongside leading local firms. Our commitment, local and multinational expertise, and business know-how means our clients rely on us when it matters most.  

In Growing Loop, Tom Szaky Continues Quest to Make TerraCycle Irrelevant

In Tom Szaky’s Utopian worldview, the waste-management company he founded in 2001 would cease to exist, in part because all consumer goods products would be available in reusable containers. And so as part of its progress to make itself irrelevant, TerraCycle announced last month its Loop product-reuse initiative has become available in every ZIP code in the continental United States.

TerraCycle CEO Tom Szaky on why ‘caring’ about recycling isn’t enough

Waste is an omnipresent downside — one thing that concurrently impacts the environment, international financial system, and private lives. Provided that plastic waste alone is projected to be as high as 53 billion pounds a year by 2030, we can not ignore it. In accordance with TerraCycle CEO Tom Szaky, the issue isn’t that we’re ignoring, it the issue is that it’s bodily troublesome for the person to do something about it. Szaky says waste has at all times been an issue, however public consciousness actually went up within the 21st century, because the rise of web curiosity in issues such because the influence of waste and ocean plastics moved it from an issue to a disaster. As Szaky says, there’s no “good consumption,” and everyone knows far more concerning the situation than we used to. However as a lot as we would wish to partake of the recycle/cut back/reuse answer, the shortcomings aren’t essentially on us. Says Szaky, “All of us agree that it’s the difficulty, and all of us should work, however what will we do to really make it a actuality?”

New York Circular City initiative report launch

On 1st October, Freshfields launched the New York Circular City Initiative report, a collaboration of over 20 experts, influencers and thought leaders who have worked together to help the City of New York make the transition to the circular economy. The report ‘Complex Challenges, Circular Solutions’ offers a new vision for the future and provides a roadmap for establishing a circular economy in New York City that can support the city’s recovery by delivering jobs and economic growth while helping the city address its waste and climate challenges. You can watch the recording of the launch event and the full report can now be accessed here.
The launch took place as a global webinar and the panel included;
  • Joey Bergstein, CEO Seventh Generation and Unilever North America Home Care Lead
  • Kate Daly, Managing Director Center for the Circular Economy, Closed Loop Partners
  • Oliver Dudok van Heel, Lead Author and Head of Client Sustainability and Environment, Freshfields
  • Joke Dufourmont, Lead, Circular Jobs Initiative, Circle Economy
  • James Patchett, President and CEO, NYC Economic Development Corporation
  • Tom Szaky, CEO and Founder, TerraCycle
  • Timothy Wilkins, Global Partner for Client Sustainability, Freshfields
The virtual event kicked off with an introduction by Timothy Wilkins, Partner for Client Sustainability at Freshfields who began by reflecting on the past 18 months from when Freshfields first launched its client sustainability practice. While the initial report launch was due in March, “The pandemic was a time for reflection for everyone and this prompted us to go further in our research in New York City’s recovery, job growth, economic stimulation and to tackle inequality”. He went onto thank all the contributors to the research and stressed the importance of assembling such a multi-stakeholder group. “The world is facing some huge challenges. Put simply, these challenges require partnerships and collaborations to solve”. These opening remarks were closely followed by a summary of the report findings and recommendations by Oliver Dudok van Heel, Head of Client Sustainability and Environment at Freshfields. The initial thinking and reasoning behind launching this initiative can be found in Oliver’s previous blog – Why circular cities are key to the pandemic recovery, Circular New York City launch.   The lively panel discussion then further looked at a number of different issues within the current linear economy and discussed circular opportunities, all the while reflecting on the last few months of the COVID-19 pandemic.   Key takeaways  Learning lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic James Patchett, President and CEO of NYC Economic Development Corporation initiated the panel discussion on a positive note by highlighting some of the valuable lessons learnt from the pandemic. His quote “We may have not learned them in the way we wanted but we have certainly learned some valuable lessons very quickly, which we must not forget” was a common theme echoed throughout the discussion as all of the panellists reflected on the past few months. Some key learnings and circular themes from the report were further explored in the discussion:    Localising supply chains and increasing resilience  COVID-19 has shown just how global and complex our supply chains are along with their vulnerability to disruption. This has caused many of us to re-think and take steps to re-localise our supply chains, purely out of necessity. A key example of this in New York is approaching local manufacturers to re-tool for the manufacture of medical PPE (personal protective equipment) at the start of the pandemic. Many cities, including New York, struggled to source adequate PPE when the crisis first began due to an overreliance on markets such as China and India and thus suffering from continuity of supply issues. Medical PPE is just one of many supply chain examples that have come under scrutiny for their globalised and complex structure during the pandemic. It is worth noting that various global supply chains have also been criticised for many years against a backdrop of environmental and human rights allegations. This point was also picked up in the questions and answers section where a question on the role the circular economy can play in helping to tackle modern slavery issues in supply chains was raised. Joey Bergstein, CEO Seventh Generation and Unilever North America Home Care Lead gave an example from Unilever where Ben & Jerry’s sources from local bakeries, which shortens supply chains thus reducing environmental impact and creates local employment where employees are paid a living wage.   Job creation  As a result of COVID-19, many industries such as hospitality and tourism are sadly on the brink of collapse and have led to mass unemployment. There is a very large number of people currently out of work whose skills could be put to good use. This will not only benefit the wellbeing of those individuals but also support the now many struggling economies worldwide, and of course in New York. Joke Dufourmont, Lead of the Circular Jobs Initiative from Circle Economy delved into some of the details of their circular jobs analysis which led to the conclusion of the potential for 11,000 good quality jobs linked to the circular economy in New York. The panel was unanimous in acknowledging that the circular economy is often associated with recycling alone. Similar to how reusing an item is considerably more valuable than recycling based on the waste hierarchy (e.g. using a reusable coffee cup instead of trying to recycle a disposable one), there is an urgent need to shift from a recycling economy where too much waste is generated in the first place, to a reuse economy. This brings with it a wealth of new job opportunities in sectors that overlap. These potential new jobs do not only cover jobs such as repair and maintenance but encompass a diverse range of industries such as manufacturing, design, engineering, architecture and education. The idea behind a circular economy and circular jobs is that circularity is taken into consideration right from the inception of a product or service. For instance; designing products that are built to last and are easily repairable, rather than planned for obsolescence. The 11,000 potential jobs stated by the Circle Economy analysis also range from local to state-wide in New York, which ties in with the need for more localised supply chains. Joke went on to stress that resilience (i.e. the ability to adapt after a shock) is one of the missing links when discussing jobs and economies. A diverse economy is vital for resilience and this requires a diverse labour market and diverse labour skills. The circular economy can offer exactly that.   Consumer behaviour or “human” behaviour?  Despite the huge challenges brought about by the pandemic, individuals have demonstrated that they still care about sustainability. This ties in with the rise of “ethical consumerism”. However, the panellists agreed that using the word “consumer” may not necessarily be representative. Kate Daly, Managing Director Center for the Circular Economy at Closed Loop Partners interestingly pointed out that it might be more applicable to refer to the notion of consumer behaviour as human behaviour. Joey went on to expand on Kate’s remarks by explaining that the word “consumer” is very one dimensional and that we need to think holistically about people. For instance; Oliver gave the example of the innovative shopping mall in Sweden (ReTuna) that sells only second life products (e.g., clothes, electronics etc.), thus still providing people with that enjoyable shopping experience but by minimising the impact on the environment.   There are many people that want to be purposeful and “help make the world better”. However, Tom Szaky, CEO and Founder of TerraCycle echoed that it is not enough to expect consumers to choose a sustainable option solely because “it’s the right thing to do”. If it is to be truly accessible by everyone, the consumer or “human” choice also needs to be based on many other factors such as price, convenience and value. Quite often, sustainable options are not accessible for many reasons such as financial (e.g. more sustainable or ethical products are typically more expensive) and logistics (e.g. not being near a shop that offers sustainable alternatives such as product refills). This can also help tackle various inequality issues, where sustainable choices are often associated with being far more accessible to the privileged. The interesting point was also raised of the need for the more sustainable products to simply be the better product. Better in terms of quality and user experience. Sustainability (e.g. refurbished products) should not compromise on the value the product has to offer (e.g. a brand-new product). All of these factors feed into choices individuals make.   So- what comes next?  A legal framework for a circular economy  As a lawyer himself, Tim asked the very important question of what legislation will be key in supporting the transition to the circular economy. Tom pointed out that he welcomes regulation such as Extended Producer Responsibility, which is a policy approach under which producers are given a significant responsibility- financial and/or physical for the treatment or disposal of post-consumer products. However, there is still a need for more to support this transition to a circular economy, particularly in the US, where these legal pressures and regulation are not as widespread as in Europe. However, Tom noted that quite often even commencing the dialogue around legislative reform can drive behaviour as companies seek to respond to consumers and stay ahead of their competition.   Partnerships for a circular economy  Cities can create ecosystems for great collaboration and partnerships. For instance; New York has fantastic universities with fresh talent who are challenging the status quo and a thriving entrepreneur pool. Companies are now taking sustainability seriously so it’s a great time to be innovative. There is essentially demand being created in the market due to a number of different factors. However, these innovations need to be accessible and inclusive, as highlighted earlier on.   Kate highlighted that linear economic models are expensive, which is what most of our economies are currently based on. For instance; every year, 60 million dollars of tax payer’s money goes on disposing textiles, which would otherwise have value. There are some great opportunities for partnerships to help solve inefficiencies like this. The panel discussed some great examples of partnerships such as a coalition of consumer goods companies and TerraCycle in launching the global shopping system and reuse model- Loop. Loop allows shoppers to consume products in a sustainable manner by refillable packaging which is collected, cleaned and reused by TerraCycle, offering a circular solution. It was stressed that many more partnerships like this are required and that these huge problems can’t be solved by Loop alone. It requires multi-stakeholder collaboration, both in the private and public sector.   The NYC Economic Development Corporation is excited to take this forward and will be making announcements in the coming weeks for various circular economy partnerships. James credited these new partnership opportunities to the New York Circular City initiative convened by Freshfields.  As Tom concluded so eloquently, “Simply put, we are running out of resources, so we simply have no choice but to make economies circular”. 
Simply put, we are running out of resources, so we simply have no choice but to make economies circular. Tom Szaky, CEO TerraCycle
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TerraCycle CEO Tom Szaky on why ‘caring’ about recycling isn’t enough

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Tom Szaky will be speaking at our online event, TNW 2020 about the impact COVID-19 has had on waste management and recycling. To find out more about his talk and the other speakers you can see with your (free) ticket, check out our tracks here. Waste is an omnipresent problem — something that simultaneously impacts our environment, global economy, and personal lives. Given that plastic waste alone is projected to be as high as 53 billion pounds a year by 2030, we cannot ignore it. According to TerraCycle CEO Tom Szaky, the problem isn’t that we’re ignoring, it the problem is… This story continues at The Next Web
 

Sustainable Brands Istanbul 2020

The Breakthrough Digital Event: Redesigning the Future Together Change Leaders of the Brand Community Gathers Online at SB Turkey on September 16 – 17   Sustainable Brands® Global Platform’s Turkey gathering SB Turkey’20 Virtual Event, will take place on September 16 – 17 with the Delivering the Good Life theme in its 3rd year of 'Good Life' initiative.   In the breakthrough digital event, leading speakers and transformation leaders from around the world and Turkey will talk about the increasing role of brands in reshaping the future.   Sustainable Brands global platform inspires a new generation of business leaders who share the latest developments in sustainable business and brands with leaders managing change in the business world at events it organizes around the world every year. Sustainable Brands Global Platform’s Turkey event SB Turkey will gather digitally this year due to the pandemic.   In the 3rd year of the 'Good Life' initiative, following the themes of 'Redefining the Good Life' and 'Redesigning the Good Life', SB Turkey’20 will take place on September 16 - 17 with the theme 'Delivering the Good Life'. The leading speakers from around the world and Turkey’s brand leaders will take the stage in this breakthrough digital event.   Change Leaders on The SB Turkey Stage Among the notable speakers of SB Turkey, where simultaneous sessions will be held at 3 different stage; brand purpose strategy consult Simon Mainwaring, founder and CEO of We First; an internationally recognized visionary, authority and educator on ECO lifestyle Marci Zaroff, CEO and Chairman of the Board of Directors of ECOfashion Corp; an innovative recycling company founder and CEO of TerraCycle Tom Szaky; Global Economy Program Director of New York University, author of the book "The Serendipity Mindset" Christian Busch and many more thought leaders.   Experience the Event where Participants Creating Environmental and Social Benefits SB Turkey created 2 separate models for event participation against the struggle of the whole world during the pandemic to start a cooperation with its attendees for a better future together.   Individuals and organizations will be able to contribute to the future by choosing the area they want to contribute; they can choose to create environmental benefit or social benefit.   Participants who want to create social benefits will be able to contribute to Turkey’s most established educational institution for equality of opportunity in education, while participants who want to neutralize their carbon footprint in combating climate change will be able to contribute to tree planting with the Aegean Forest Foundation.   Good Life Brand Award Ceremony! The results of the "Good Life Research", which focuses on the lifestyle, consumption habits, and values that redefine and shape the good life of the Turkish consumer, will also be announced at the "online" award ceremony to be held on September 17 in SB Turkey.   Digital Expo Area On the second day of the event (September 17), while the SB Ocean Turkey 2020 Side Event will be held, Digital Booth Areas can be visited where brands can share details about their products, services, and the latest news.   HP Graphic Arts is the Principal Sponsor of SB Turkey and P&G and Unilever are the Premier Sponsor. Major Sponsors include L’Oreal, Tencel, Veocel and Yıldız Holding. Other supporters of the event are Signify, Eker, and Kordsa.   For detailed information about the conference, you can visit https://virtualevent.sustainablebrandsturkey.com.

Understanding zero-waste shopping with Loop and TerraCycle's Tom Szaky

How did you come up with the idea for TerraCycle and Loop?

I got the idea for TerraCycle as a college freshman at Princeton University in 2001. The original business model was vermicomposting (converting garbage into worm poop), packaging it in used soda bottles and selling the resulting fertilizer. To find a larger supply of bottles, we created a national collection program, which was the precursor for our current free recycling programs. While we no longer produce fertilizer, we have moved into finding recycling solutions for some of the world’s toughest garbage problems, proving that everything is technically recyclable and developing solutions for nearly every waste stream you can think of, including drink pouches, used toothbrushes, cigarette butts and even dirty diapers. In short, TerraCycle takes waste that is not recyclable through conventional methods (i.e. your municipality’s curbside recycling program) and turns it into raw material that is then used to make new products. TerraCycle is operational in 21 countries. The idea for Loop emerged three years ago where TerraCycle and leading packaged goods manufacturers discussed the idea of restructuring the life cycle ownership of packaged goods to be durable and reusable. TerraCycle in partnership with 25 participating brands, including founding partners Procter & Gamble, Unilever, and Nestle, officially unveiled the Loop platform during a panel discussion at the 2019 World Economic Forum.