"Human Resources",which consists of ten 30-minute episodes and debuts August 8, documents the deadline-driven world of an eccentric entrepreneur and his team of employees at TerraCycle, a company trying to eliminate global waste by taking anything bound for a landfill and turning it into a functional new product.
The Entenmann’s Little Bites “Recycle… Reuse… Replenish” Fully Recyclable Lunch Earth Day campaign teaches kids the importance of reducing waste while earning money for their schools by redeeming Little Bites pouches for cash and points with recycling partner TerraCycle® through the Entenmann’s Little Bites Pouch Brigade®
TerraCycle will take traditional non-recyclable items like potato chips bags, pens, cookie packages, drink pouches, and candy wrappers. They then turn them into consumer products like insulated coolers, picture frames, pencils, placemats, flower pots, and laptop holders
Turning waste streams into revenue streams is a hot topic as companies work toward “nil to landfill.” Recycler
TerraCycle is determined to address the diaper disposal problem, which costs consumers an estimated $100 million or more each year.
Who doesn’t have a drawer full of unused pens and markers? If they’re no longer suitable for use, send them to TerraCycle, a New Jersey company that partners with Newell Rubbermaid to turn the utensils into plastic storage bins. The company will pay the postage.
If anyone knows about scaling a green business, it’s Tom Szaky, founder of TerraCycle in Trenton, New Jersay. Szaky launched the company in 2001, with a plant fertilizer made entirely from waste.
This morning, Albany County Executive Dan McCoy joined Entenmann's executives, along with representatives from TerraCycle, an international leader in collection and reuse of non-recyclable post-consumer waste, to honor the kids from Forest Park becoming recycling “pros” and turning trash into cash for their school
TerraCycle, in partnership with Colgate and ShopRite, has announced the Recycled Playground Challenge, a new initiative that aims to encourage healthy smiles and environments among schoolchildren and consumers
Three runners-up will receive a TerraCycle pack of $150 worth of nifty green products.
Entenmann's will be rewarding winners with weekly prizes including Little Bites coupons, upcycled Little Bites-branded Lunch Sacks made by TerraCycle