TERRACYCLE NEWS

ELIMINATING THE IDEA OF WASTE®

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Pivot, a cable channel geared toward Millennials, is launching Human Resources, a series shot in the faux-documentary style of “The Office.” It follows a fictional business called TerraCycle that’s working to repurpose all garbage. Some of the best jokes focus on the relaxed atmosphere of the Millennial workplace, where yoga sessions and workers’ dogs are the norm. It debuts Aug. 8 at 10 p.m.

Clovis Elementary School Top Recycler

CLOVIS -- Students and teachers at Ranchvale Elementary School are the top collectors of lunch kits in the Lunch Kit Brigade, a free, national recycling program created by Lunchables Lunch Combinations and TerraCycle.
By collecting waste from lunch kits of any brand, the school has helped to divert 794 units of lunch kit waste from landfills.
After they sign up to join a recycling Brigade, schools earn points for every unit of waste they collect and send to TerraCycle.
"Were very proud of the work that students and teachers at Ranchvale Elementary School have done for this Brigade," said TerraCycle CEO Tom Szaky. "We love working with Lunchables to celebrate and reward schools doing such great things for the environment."

Trash TV: TerraCycle Subject Of New Workplace 'Docu-Comedy'

The merry band of upcyclers at TerraCycle, the “waste solution development” firm that specializes in transforming even the most undesirable/hard-to-recycle garbage into nifty consumer goods, are getting their own reality series pardon, unscripted “docu-comedy.”
The 10-episode series, “Human Resources,” will debut on Participant Media’s social advocacy-focused cable channel, Pivot TV, on Aug. 8 at 10 p.m. ET/PT.
Having once toured TerraCycle’s labyrinthine, graffiti-clad headquarters in Trenton, New Jersey, before, I can honestly say it’s a primo spot for a whacky workplace reality show — imagine the free-spirited love child of a science lab, the workroom on “Rupaul’s Drag Race,” a highly specific episode of “Hoarders,” and the interior of a New York City subway car circa 1982. Sprinkle this with a liberal dusting of "Pee-Hee's Playhouse"  and you’re somewhat close.
Needless to say, it’s a magically disorienting place.
And along with such an unorthodox yet dynamic work environment — a “nonstop, deadline-driven world” — according to promotional materials) comes a motley crew of staffers, all working toward a single mission to “eliminate the idea of waste.”
You’ve got TerraCycle founder Tom Szaky, a Princeton dropout who went from peddling worm poop fertilizer packaged in reclaimed plastic bottles to heading a global upcycling empire; Tiffany Threadgould, a Pomeranian-toting DIY doyenne who heads up the design department; and Albe Zakes, an affable former intern who worked his way up the chain to become the thriving company's VP of Global Marketing and Communications.
Other TerraCycle staffers who appear on the show include in-house graffiti artist and resident Rastafarian Dean Innocenzi, scientist Rick Zultner; and number-crunching global operations manager Andrew Heine who apparently really likes Phish and thinks a large number of his colleagues are bonkers.
While the business at hand — design, innovation, outreach, community involvement, landfill avoidance, and revolutionizing the way we look at our trash — plays a crucial/inspirational part of “Human Resources,” it’s the TerraCycle employees who provide the show, produced by Left/Right ("Mob Wives," "The Rachel Zoe Project") with the goods —you know, the drama, the infighting, the eye-rolling, the interoffice hijinks.
As a press statement released by Participant Media explains, the mash-up of "eclectic" personalities at TerraCycle HQ “run the gamut from science geeks and eco-passionates who take time away from their (recycled) desks to snack on kale chips and take part in office yoga, to skeptical, more straight-laced employees who work hard and provide a balance to the crazy antics that sometimes bend the rules of corporate America.”
Basically, it’s an unscripted, Millennial’s version of “The Office” but where the water cooler trash talk revolves around talking about actual trash; it's “Murphy Brown” with mountains of empty Capri Sun pouches instead of a sink filled with empty coffee mugs.
Beyond “Human Resources,” TerraCycle recently partnered with Participant Media and nonprofit Recycle Across America (RAA) to launch a new social action campaign called Recycle Right! The campaign, which was actually inspired by “Human Resources,” aims to “expand the use of standardized recycling labels to empower everyone to lessen their environmental footprint by fixing the dysfunction of recycling.”
Elaborates Szaky in a recent guest post written for sister site TreeHugger:
By combining our strengths, TerraCycle, RAA and Pivot TV will bring more awareness to reshaping recycling and bettering the environment. Although this is only one partnership hoping to better the environment, it is still better than no initiative at all. After all, it takes a planet to save a planet, and you always have to start somewhere.
And if you're experiencing a wicked case of déjà vu right now, you're not alone: This isn't the first time that the sponsored waste specialists have done reality TV. In 2009, the 13-year-old company was featured on the National Geographic series "Garbage Moguls."
"Human Resources" appears to be the first excursion into the workplace reality genre for Pivot TV, a channel perhaps best known for blending the topical (the Meghan McCain-hosted docu-talk series "Raising McCain") and the cultishly adored ("Buffy the Vampire Slayer" marathons). And while we've seen multiple shows on numerous different professions — cake baking, aquarium manufacturing, funeral directing, deep sea fishing, etc.  — come and go, it's unlikely you'll ever see anything quite like "Human Resources" as TerraCycle is truly one-of-a-kind.

Behind 'Human Resources': TerraCycle's Mission To Upcycle Anything And Everything

TerraCycle's Trenton, New Jersey, headquarters building is full of garbage — and lot of it is part of the décor. Old doors become desks and the space dividers — there are no solid walls — are made of vinyl records and plastic bottles. The new Pivot reality series "Human Resources,"  which airs on Aug. 8, focuses on the recycling firm and its quirky employees. The 11-year-old concern is clearly not your average workplace, and that's by design.
Founded 11 years ago by Canadian transplant Tom Szaky, TerraCycle's mission is finding new ways to repurpose garbage that isn't easily recycled, first by devising collection means and arranging funding from consumer product manufacturers, municipalities or individuals, and then reusing or recycling various parts and selling them.
Szaky explains how it works: "You go to TerraCycle.com and sign up for collection, with free shipping. Then we take the waste, and our scientists look at ways we can manipulate it into new things. We work with product companies who buy those usable raw materials, and make new products. It could be toothpaste tubes turned into forks that are sold at Target or Walmart."
The idea, says Szaky, is to "not create things unless they're replacing existing objects." Toward that end, Rubber Maid makes trashcans from potato chip bag plastic, Timbuk2 makes messenger bags from old post office bags, and Hasbro makes Mr. Potato Head from waste plastic, all facilitated by TerraCycle. "If you buy plastic lumber, there’s a 20 percent chance the raw materials came from me," Szaky notes. "Seventy-five percent of American schools run a TerraCycle platform of some kind. Just this year alone, we will process 100 million pounds of non-recyclable waste." That includes new programs to handle chewing gum and cigarette butts.
Szaky proudly explains that there are now cigarette recycling bins throughout Vancouver, and New Orleans is among the 10 cities that will have them soon, and so will Australia. "We limit our profit to 1 percent of our revenue, and do that by taking all the extra money that we get and reinvesting it into more R&D, coming up with more ways to recycle incredibly complex things," he says. The current challenge? Finding a way to recycle dirty diapers and used feminine hygiene products, which pose unique problems.
"First, how do you collect it? With diapers, there's the question of how do you transport it. Is it hazardous? How do you safely do that? How do you make a system in which a mom, or senior — half the diapers are elderly care — can be collected in a way that's comfortable for them? You have to think all those things through to where someone says, 'That's less gross than putting it in the garbage can,'" Szaky relates. "The next step is sanitization, and the way we do it is with gamma rays. That kills all the pathogens — E. coli, salmonella. With something like diapers or feminine hygiene, we're respectful: we're not going to make it into a fork, something that touches your mouth. We're going to make it into an industrial product. Then you have to make people aware it exists so you can get it out there."
Szaky has a long history of making poop profitable. His first product was organic plant food made from liquefied worm feces. He got the idea when worms that were fed organic garden waste produced a fertilizer that made his plants thrive. "We called it TerraCycle Plant Food and packaged it in used soda bottles. It did really well. We got it into Home Depot, Walmart, Target. It got up to about $3.5 million in sales. We realized that we could make products out of any kind of garbage."
Today, TerraCycle operates in 26 countries, with plans to expand to Chile, India, China and South Korea, and will do $25 million in sales this year. The key to success, says Szaky, is thinking outside the box. He holds up a plastic bottle. "If you were an alien and came to Earth and didn't know what it was for, what would you consider making from it? You have to destroy your preconceptions. That's how you unlock the magic of upcycling."
Szaky, who wears a bracelet woven from scraps by his jewelry designer fiancé, parts of it from old tents, has never bought a new car, shops on eBay for home goods, and wears "one pair of jeans all year until they get a hole in them and then I buy another." He's aware that his 200 travel days of travel a year widens his carbon footprint, but he's able to justify it somewhat because "the work we do in those places does a lot of good."
He believes that consumerism is at the root of most environmental problems. "We buy way too much stuff. If we really want environmental problems to go away, we have to reflect on that as consumers and buy very differently. And if we can get companies to make things from waste, that removes the need for buying, of needing new materials to be taken out of the Earth, which is the number one environmental impact of making stuff. We need that to shift, and to do that we have to make it sexy, cool and something we aspire to."
One way TerraCycle is spreading its message is in a forthcoming 250-page coffee table book that will highlight some of its successes. "Each chapter follows one waste category like plastic, wood or metal and shows how it came to the planet, how it works today, and how it has evolved and changed," says Szaky. "It's about painting the picture of the world of waste."