TerraCycle is an ecologically friendly company that takes your garbage and upcycles it into green products and then sells it to many big box retailers, resulting in less trash in our waste stream. The company has developed a process that turns chip
bags, cookie wrappers, and other plastic based wrappers into plastic items such as coolers and trash cans, and aluminum is upcycled into pavers, bricks and more.
Grow Berlin Green <
http://www.growberlingreen.org> has two collection receptacles secured next to the paper/cardboard recycle containers on Williams Street. Save your product wrappers as you would your glass bottles, cardboard and newspapers and deposit them in the appropriate receptacle bins. They collect and sort the trash, then send it to TerraCycle. In return, Grow Berlin Green receives will receive a check twice a year based on the amount of collected garbage sent in, and then give it back to the Berlin community.
A friend of mind recently informed me about some cool research she has been doing I've been doing about a (relatively) new social enterprise called Terracycle. Terracycle is one of the fastest growing green companies in the world. Their website shares a bit more about what they do:
TerraCycle’s purpose is to eliminate the idea of waste. We do this by creating a national recycling systems for the previously non-recyclable. The process starts by offering collect programs (many of them free) to collect your waste and then convert the collected waste into a wide range of products and materials. With over 14 million people collecting waste in 11 countries together we have diverted billions of pieces of waste that are either upcycled or recycled into over 1,500 various products available at major retailers ranging from Walmart<
http://walmart.com/>
to Whole Foods Market <
http://wholefoodsmarket.com/>
. Our hope is to eliminate the idea of waste by creating collection and solution systems for anything that today ends up in our trash.
My friend noticed yesterday that the company has partnered with another organization to create curriculums for teaching kids K-12 about waste, and thought you might find this interesting!
Check out some awesome environmental lesson ideas at:
http://www.terracycle.net/curricula <
http://www.terracycle.net/curricula> .
Enjoy, and help your students be more GREEN today!!
The logic is simple and
sustainable. By
reusing post-consumer waste, “trash” never makes it to a landfill, and an environmentally-invasive production cycle stops.
As we are the most wasteful nation in the world, we should pay attention to this incredible usage of garbage.
There are already some American companies who are paying attention.
TerraCycle <
http://www.terracycle.net> , a small but successful New Jersey-based company, is pushing the boundaries of reusing waste that is hard to recycle. TerraCycle began in 2001 by two Princeton freshman, who collected Dining Hall waste and used a worm compost to make natural plant food products. Now, TerraCycle is making everything from
Capri-Sun drink-pouch backpacks to M&M-wrapper messenger bags.
At first glance, you’d probably mistake this for an expensive designer gown. But it’s actually made of 600 wrappers of M&M Peanuts. It’s equal to five yards of silk.
<
http://ecofriendlytip.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/Screen-shot-2011-01-28-at-11.09.33-AM.png>
This ball gown, which could pass off as something a Hollywood celebrity can wear to an awards show. It’s designed by Christina Liedtke for the TerraCycle Green Up Shop.
The gown was presented during Earth Day’s 40th Anniversary.
Gorgeous isn’t it?
Many major brands are getting on board with upcycling. Scott tissue and Huggies are sponsoring programs to collect plastic packaging waste from paper products and diapers. And since most oral hygiene products aren’t recyclable, Colgate and TerraCycle have partnered to collect used toothbrushes and toothpaste tubes.
Maxwell Elementary School pupils are saving the world. And they recently received an award for their efforts.
Lynn Davidson/McDuffie Mirror
TerraCycle Inc. named the school among the Top 100 in the nation for recycling drink pouches. Lauren Taylor, of TerraCycle, said Maxwell Elementary was ranked because it had collected 44,517 drink pouches by October.
"Obviously, the children there are passionate about recycling and aware of what steps they can take to protect the environment," Ms. Taylor said. "It's great to see them taking part in such a large-scale project."
A certificate in a frame made from shredded drink pouches was sent to the school and presented during a faculty meeting on Wednesday, Jan. 19. Maxwell Elementary was one of only four elementary schools in Georgia to receive the recognition, according to Ms. Taylor.
TerraCycle provides free waste-collection programs for hard-to-recycle materials. The company transforms the waste into affordable green products, according to its Web site. The company recently reached a milestone. It has collected 50 million drink pouches -- the equivalent to 20 school buses in weight, 480 football fields in length, enough to stretch across the Grand Canyon nine times if laid side-by-side.
"So, the children at Maxwell Elementary helped because the 44,000 they collected contributed to that," Ms. Taylor said.
TerraCycle collects drink pouches, soda bottles, chip bags, candy and gum wrappers, zip-close bags, cheese wrappers, coffee containers and Lunchable containers and turns them into tote bags, lunch bags, book bags, coolers, clipboards, picture frames, bottles, fences and other items, which are sold at Target, Kmart, Walmart, The Home Depot and via its Web site,
www.terracycleshop.com.
Elisa Mercando of Belle Mead models the 1st place Upper School team design from the Stuart Country Day School “green” fashion show on January 14th, 2011. The dress was crafted from 7 different packs of playing cards, board game pieces and boxes, an old sheet, old buttons, plastic balls from a children’s ball house jungle, yarn, and ribbon. A Lower School team made the accessories. Other members of this team of 10th graders include Nicole Starke of East Windsor and Sara McArthur of Hopewell. The dress will be modeled at the annual Spring Auction, “See How Our Garden Grows” on April 2, 2011 at The Hyatt Regency Princeton. It will also be on display in The TerraCycle Store in Palmer Square through the end of February.
Embalagens de produtos da linha cut-size são coletadas e transformadas em novos materiais e produtos de qualidade com valor ambiental agregado.
Eco-friendly students at Cape Cod Hill School in New Sharon are collecting food waste off lunch trays to make their own compost and they are collecting empty juice pouches, chip bags and cookie wrappers for Terracycle, a nationwide program that pays schools to collect non-recyclable waste that is converted to other products. So far, the project has made more than $500. Mt. Blue Regional School District board members this week heard from teachers Katy Perry and Patricia Murray and Principal Cheryl Pike on the growing environmental activism. Working on the Terracycle recycling project are, from left, Colton Nason, Hunter Robbins, Brianna Jackson, Ben Christopher, Dawson Adams and Addisyn Davis.
Elisa Mercando of Belle Mead models the 1st place Upper School team design from the Stuart Country Day School “green” fashion show on January 14th, 2011. The dress was crafted from 7 different packs of playing cards, board game pieces and boxes, an old sheet, old buttons, plastic balls from a children’s ball house jungle, yarn, and ribbon. A Lower School team made the accessories. Other members of this team of 10th graders include Nicole Starke of East Windsor and Sara McArthur of Hopewell. The dress will be modeled at the annual Spring Auction, “See How Our Garden Grows” on April 2, 2011 at The Hyatt Regency Princeton. It will also be on display in The TerraCycle Store in Palmer Square through the end of February. (Photo by Kristine Poznanski.)