TERRACYCLE NEWS

ELIMINATING THE IDEA OF WASTE®

Lendületben a Csikk Brigád

Az Egyesült Államok, Kanada és több más európai ország után Csikk Brigád címmel Magyarországon is elindult a cigarettacsikk-gyűjtési és újrahasznosítási akció.A már több országban sikerrel működő cigarettahulladék-gyűjtő és újrahasznosító programra szórakozóhelyek, vendéglátóipari egységek és irodák regisztrálhatnak. A Csikk Brigád akcióval lehetővé válik a cigarettacsikkek és a cigaretta műanyag csomagolásainak teljes körű újrahasznosítása - közölte az amerikai TerraCycle magyarországi képviselete.

Local residents collect cigarette butts

According to Keep America Beautiful, 65 percent of all cigarette butts are disposed of improperly and cigarette waste accounts for 38 percent of all U.S. roadway litter. But Gail Wedding from Laytonville and Russell Minor from Potter Valley are doing their part to keep their cigarette waste out of the local landfill by sending it to recycling pioneer TerraCycle. Russell Minor collects his cigarette butts at home and stores them in an old "oil rag" can until it is time to send them to TerraCycle.  To spread the word, he shows his friends how easy it is to collect at home. "I feel the more people divert from landfills, the better off our planet will be," said Minor. "It's important that as much waste as possible gets diverted from the landfills into a new life as something useful." Cigarette butts are not biodegradable and do not break down quickly.  They, and other related tobacco waste, are the number one item recovered during the annual Ocean Conservancy's International Coastal Cleanup Day, with more than 52 million cigarette filters collected from beaches in the past 25 years. The Cigarette Waste Brigade accepts extinguished cigarettes, cigarette filters, loose tobacco pouches, outer plastic packaging, inner foil packaging, rolling paper, and ash. TerraCycle does not accept the cardboard packaging of cigarette boxes since they can usually be recycled through municipal recycling programs. Visit www.terracycle.com to learn more about TerraCycle or sign up for the Cigarette Waste Brigade.

Cigarette waste is recycled instead of going to landfill

Russell Minor collects his cigarette butts at home and stores them in an old "oil rag" can until it is time to send them to TerraCycle.  To spread the word, he shows his friends how easy it is to collect at home. "I feel the more people divert from landfills, the better off our planet will be," said Minor. "It's important that as much waste as possible gets diverted from the landfills into a new life as something useful." This recycling program is a joint effort between Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Co. and TerraCycle, which teamed up to create The Cigarette Waste Brigade, a national program to collect and recycle cigarette butts and other cigarette-related waste, according to Jeff Kranz of TerraCycle. Cigarette butts are not biodegradable and do not break down quickly.  They, and other related tobacco waste, are the number one item recovered during the annual Ocean Conservancy's International Coastal Cleanup Day, with more than 52 million cigarette filters collected from beaches in the past 25 years. The Cigarette Waste Brigade accepts extinguished cigarettes, cigarette filters, loose tobacco pouches, outer plastic packaging, inner foil packaging, rolling paper, and ash. TerraCycle does not accept the cardboard packaging of cigarette boxes since they can usually be recycled through municipal recycling programs. Visit www.terracycle.com to learn more about TerraCycle or sign up for the Cigarette Waste Brigade.  

One Good Thing about Cigarette Butts

What you can do with cigarette butts Maybe you smoke or maybe you don’t; perhaps you know someone who does. Naturally, quitting would be the best thing any smoker can do, but one of the next best things is to recycle your butts.  Yes, cigarette butts can be useful and can be recycled, according to Tom Szaky, CEO and founder of TerraCycle, Inc., a company that has developed solutions for difficult-to-recycle items, including cigarette butts. TerraCycle has teamed up with Santa Fe Natural Tobacco, which sponsors the Cigarette Waste Brigade®. In a New York Times article from April 2012, Szaky explained that the ash, paper, and tobacco are separated from the filters and the organic materials are composted. The remaining cellulose acetate is sanitized and molded via injection into plastics that are used to make plastic pallets and beams. Albe Zakes, VP of Media Relations for TerraCycle, said in a phone interview that efforts to recycle cigarette butts extend beyond US shores. TerraCycle currently also partners with Imperial Tobacco in Canada and soon will have a program in Europe a well. Individuals and groups who are interested in helping clean up the environment of unhealthy cigarette butts and getting them recycled can sign up for TerraCycle’s Cigarette Waste Brigade (or check out other waste brigades). It costs nothing to sign up and nothing to ship the butts, and you could help make a difference in the health of the planet.

Cigarette waste is recycled instead of going to landfill

According to Keep America Beautiful, 65 percent of all cigarette butts are disposed of improperly and cigarette waste accounts for 38 percent of all U.S. roadway litter. But Gail Wedding from Laytonville and Russell Minor from Potter Valley are doing their part to keep their cigarette waste out of the local landfill by sending it to recycling pioneer TerraCycle. This recycling program is a joint effort between Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Co. and TerraCycle, which teamed up to create The Cigarette Waste Brigade, a national program to collect and recycle cigarette butts and other cigarette-related waste, according to Jeff Kranz of TerraCycle. Participation in this nationwide Brigade is limited to adults, aged 21 and older.  It is free, and all shipping costs are paid by Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Company.  For every pound of cigarette waste TerraCycle receives, one dollar is donated to Keep America Beautiful. The collected cigarette butts are recycled into a variety of products, primarily plastic pallets for industrial uses. Any remaining tobacco or paper is composted. Cigarette butts are not biodegradable and do not break down quickly.  They, and other related tobacco waste, are the number one item recovered during the annual Ocean Conservancy's International Coastal Cleanup Day, with more than 52 million cigarette filters collected from beaches in the past 25 years. The Cigarette Waste Brigade accepts extinguished cigarettes, cigarette filters, loose tobacco pouches, outer plastic packaging, inner foil packaging, rolling paper, and ash. TerraCycle does not accept the cardboard packaging of cigarette boxes since they can usually be recycled through municipal recycling programs.

One Good Thing about Cigarette Butts

It’s common knowledge that smoking cigarettes is the leading cause of lung cancer, that secondhand smoke is a health hazard, and that cigarette use is linked to dozens of other diseases and illnesses. But there is at least one good thing about cigarette butts: they can be recycled into useful products. Don’t cigarette butts disintegrate? Although any cigarette paper and tobacco that are tossed away break down, the butts themselves are not biodegradable, and they stick around for a long time. That’s because 95 percent of cigarette filters are made of cellulose acetate, a type of plastic, made into super thin fibers to create a filter. Yes, cigarette butts can be useful and can be recycled, according to Tom Szaky, CEO and founder of TerraCycle, Inc., a company that has developed solutions for difficult-to-recycle items, including cigarette butts. TerraCycle has teamed up with Santa Fe Natural Tobacco, which sponsors the Cigarette Waste Brigade®. In a New York Times article from April 2012, Szaky explained that the ash, paper, and tobacco are separated from the filters and the organic materials are composted. The remaining cellulose acetate is sanitized and molded via injection into plastics that are used to make plastic pallets and beams.

Cuatro consejos para reciclar el material escolar

El fin de curso ya está aquí y es hora de organizar el material escolar utilizado durante el curso antes de que se convierta en una montaña más de residuos en nuestros hogares. Esta tarea es especialmente costosa en cursos inferiores de infantil y primaria, donde cuadernos y libros se mezclan con carpetas de trabajos, folios y material de escritura, pintura, etc. Una revisión a fondo del material es básica para decidir qué artículos nos pueden servir para el nuevo curso y cuales debemos desechar. Hemos recopilado algunos consejos no sólo para reutilizar el material sino también para, en el caso de tener que deshacernos de él, realizarlo con la máxima seguridad de que lo hacemos bien.

Más sonrisas con menos impacto

Con esta iniciativa, Colgate invita a todos los consumidores a tomar conciencia sobre los desechos y propone disminuir el impacto ambiental a través del reciclaje de sus propios productos. Tubos de pasta dental, cepillos de dientes, hilo dental, enjuague oral y todos sus envoltorios de cuidado oral podrán tener una nueva vida a partir de este innovador programa que lanza por primera vez en Argentina. La recolección de estos productos se realizará desde el 1 de julio hasta el 31 de agosto de 2013 en 20 tiendas Walmart en ciudades de todo el páis. Cada tienda tendrá dos cajas de recolección donde se podrán depositar los desechos de productos de cuidado oral que los consumidores lleven a la tienda Walmart más cercana. Las cajas completas, luego, serán retiradas por TerraCycle, la empresa que le dará una nueva vida a los materiales, reciclándolos y transformándolos en nuevos productos. La alianza de Colgate y TerraCycle se enmarca en la estrategia global que la marca viene realizando desde hace años y que la posiciona como referente en materia de responsabilidad social. En Estados Unidos, Brasil y México, Colgate ya tiene programas de recolección junto a TerraCycle, donde ha logrado que más de 900.000 unidades de desechos de cuidado oral eviten terminar en basurales. Con este programa, Colgate se convierte en la segunda marca aliada a TerraCycle en Argentina. Ann Glotzbach, Directora Regional de Argentina y Brasil, anunció con alegría la expansión de TerraCycle en Argentina y dijo que “programas como el de Colgate demuestran el compromiso de las marcas con el cuidado del medioambiente y la responsabilidad por sus desechos.”

Walmart recicla con Colgate

Tubos de pasta dental, cepillos de dientes, hilo dental, enjuague oral y todos sus envoltorios de cuidado oral son algunos de los productos que se recolectarán desde el 1 de julio al 31 de agosto de 2013.
Colgate confirma su compromiso con el cuidado del medioambiente y en alianza con TerraCycle promueve la recolección y el reciclaje de sus productos en 20 tiendas Walmart de Argentina. Con esta iniciativa, Colgate invita a todos los consumidores a tomar conciencia sobre los desechos y propone disminuir el impacto ambiental a través del reciclaje de sus propios productos. Tubos de pasta dental, cepillos de dientes, hilo dental, enjuague oral y todos sus envoltorios de cuidado oral podrán tener una nueva vida a partir de este innovador programa que lanza por primera vez en Argentina. La recolección de estos productos se realizará desde el 1 de julio hasta el 31 de agosto de 2013 en 20 tiendas Walmart en ciudades de todo el páis. Cada tienda tendrá dos cajas de recolección donde se podrán depositar los desechos de productos de cuidado oral que los consumidores lleven a la tienda Walmart más cercana. Las cajas completas, luego, serán retiradas por TerraCycle, la empresa que le dará una nueva vida a los materiales, reciclándolos y transformándolos en nuevos productos. La alianza de Colgate y TerraCycle se enmarca en la estrategia global que la marca viene realizando desde hace años y que la posiciona como referente en materia de responsabilidad social. En Estados Unidos, Brasil y México, Colgate ya tiene programas de recolección junto a TerraCycle, donde ha logrado que más de 900.000 unidades de desechos de cuidado oral eviten terminar en basurales. Con este programa, Colgate se convierte en la segunda marca aliada a TerraCycle en Argentina. Ann Glotzbach, Directora Regional de Argentina y Brasil, anunció con alegría la expansión de TerraCycle en Argentina y dijo que “programas como el de Colgate demuestran el compromiso de las marcas con el cuidado del medioambiente y la responsabilidad por sus desechos.” En el sitio web Brigada Colgate hay un buscador de las tiendas participantes.