TERRACYCLE NEWS
ELIMINATING THE IDEA OF WASTE®
Kaffekapsler for kreftsaken
The Waste Biz: French Manufacturers Must Offer Gadget, Appliance Repair
Other stories from the waste sector:
Auto parts can now go in Zero Waste Boxes: a few months ago, we covered Terracycle’s Zero Waste Box. Not only has this concept come to the US, but it’s also vastly expanded: boxes for products ranging from automotive parts to action figures are now available (as well as “single stream” boxes). The company has boxes available for both consumers and commercial users. (via Waste Dive)
TerraCycle offers mail-in recycling service for auto parts
TerraCycle, a recycling company based in Trenton, New Jersey, is offering a new automotive parts recycling program for individuals, mechanics and auto repair shops. TerraCycle says the service, part of its Zero Waste Box collection program, is designed to reduce the number of items sent to landfills.
TerraCycle offers mail-in recycling service for auto parts
TerraCycle, a recycling company based in Trenton, New Jersey, is offering a new automotive parts recycling program for individuals, mechanics and auto repair shops. TerraCycle says the service, part of its Zero Waste Box collection program, is designed to reduce the number of items sent to landfills.
TerraCycle dabbles in auto parts recycling
Dive Brief:
- TerraCycle is launching a new car parts recycling program geared toward consumers, mechanics, and repair shops.
- The project is offered as part of the Trenton, NJ-based company’s “Zero Waste Box” collection program.
- The service intends to reduce the volume of automotive parts ending up in landfills.
“Upcycling” Visionary Tom Szaky to Speak at WCSU
DANBURY, Conn. — Tom Szaky possesses all the usual entrepreneurial traits — obsessive, innovative, smart — but he works in a business that few others do, and in the process he is creating a new intersection of industry, recycling and even art.Szaky’s company, TerraCycle, makes money by reusing products that are normally not recycled, but instead are thrown away and later buried, incinerated or left by the side of the road, including items like potato chip bags and cigarette butts.
Is less packaging really good for the environment?
My company, TerraCycle, has first-hand experience with some of these problems. In 2012, we partnered with Kenco, a leading producer of instant and ground coffee in the UK. The partnership developed on the heels of Kenco’s transition away from its glass jar package (highly recyclable) and toward a 97% lighter pouch package (non-recyclable).