It’s easy to swoon over Tom Szaky.
He started a company called TerraCycle <
http://hypervocal.com/featured-contributors/2010/video-an-interview-with-the-worm-poop-guy/www.terracycle.net> when he was just a 19-year-old freshman at Princeton University. As a pot grower in Canada, Tom had discovered that worm poop was the best fertilizer. He decided to start manufacturing worm poop by…feeding old cafeteria food to worms…and then bottling their waste in used plastic bottles. Voila! The most environmentally-friendly fertilizer, ever, that sold at a lower price point than the competition.
Members of the Norwell Cub Scouts 66 use to see a lot of Capri Sun drink pouches get thrown away. Once they signed up to recycle them through a company called TerraCycle, the school began earning 2 cents for every one of the pouches and became part of a nationwide effort that has just reached a milestone of keeping 50 million pouches out of landfills.
In addition, TerraCycle, which makes affordable, eco-friendly products from packaging waste, and Capri Sun have paid $1 million to schools and nonprofits in return for the recycled drink pouches.
10-11-18-- NorwellMariner
O projeto tem como proposta envolver o maior número de consumidores na coleta de embalagens para reciclagem das embalagens dos produtos congelados da Perdigão, como as pizzas e lasanhas.
Capri Elementary is one of about 30,000 schools nationwide participating in TerraCycle's Drink Pouch Brigade program. By collecting, sorting and sending in used drink pouches, such as Capri Sun brand beverages, students across the country are cleaning up their campuses and earning money for their schools. TerraCycle, the eco-friendly company that launched Drink Pouch Brigade in 2007, pays 2 cents for every pouch delivered.
Capri Elementary is one of about 30,000 schools nationwide participating in TerraCycle's Drink Pouch Brigade program. By collecting, sorting and sending in used drink pouches, such as Capri Sun brand beverages, students across the country are cleaning up their campuses and earning money for their schools. TerraCycle, the eco-friendly company that launched Drink Pouch Brigade in 2007, pays 2 cents for every pouch delivered.
Tom was featured live on CNN's The Big i segment and interviewed by their rising star anchor, Ali Velchey.
Last year students recycled over 7,000 juice pouches through TerraCycle, an international company founded in New Jersey that makes new products from these items.
During Tuesday afternoon’s club meeting, kids each guessed how many empty juice pouches the school has collected so far this year. Their guesses ranged from the hundreds into the millions, but the total so far this year is 1,230 pouches.
Students at Capri Elementary School in Campbell are learning some very valuable lessons about the environment, hard work and financial opportunity, and they are discovering it all through trash. Capri Elementary is one of about 30,000 schools nationwide participating in TerraCycle's Drink Pouch Brigade program. By collecting, sorting and sending in used drink pouches, such as Capri Sun brand beverages, students across the country are cleaning up their campuses and earning money for their schools.
Tom was interviewed for the NPR show, To the Best of Our Knowledge, which airs on 61 local NPR affiliates nationwide throughout the week. You can stream or download the audio file at the link below. Tom’s interview runs from 16.00 to 30.00.
WILDWOOD — Throwing away an empty Funyuns bag or an old Laffy Taffy wrapper was routine for students at Glenwood Avenue Elementary School. Not anymore. Now, teacher John Fuscellaro and his homeroom students have launched a recycling program that has students, teachers and staff collecting everything from old Ziploc bags to empty toothpaste tubes. His class then sorts them and he sends them to
TerraCycle, a company that turns the materials into new products and gives small cash payments to the school in return.