TERRACYCLE NEWS

ELIMINATING THE IDEA OF WASTE®

Free Recycle and Restring Event at Nashville Violins

Local bowed-instrument musicians are invited to attend a free recycle and restring event at Nashville Violins in Nashville on April 4, 2020 from 10:00 am to 4:00 pm. Sponsored by D’Addario® and international recycling company TerraCycle®, musicians can bring any old violin or viola strings for recycling and get their violin or viola restrung with D’Addario Ascente’ strings. Old strings collected during the event will be recycled through Playback, D’Addario’s free, national recycling program.

Free Restring and Recycle Event at Roger's Pawn, Music & Jewelry

image.png Local musicians are invited to attend a free recycle and restring event at Roger's Pawn, Music & Jewelry in Fort Payne on April 3, 2020 from 9:00 am to 5:00 pm. Sponsored by D’Addario® and international recycling company TerraCycle®, musicians can bring any old instrument strings for recycling and get their electric or acoustic guitars restrung with D’Addario NYXL or Nickel Bronze Acoustic strings. Old strings collected during the event will be recycled through Playback, D’Addario’s free, national recycling program.

Free Recycle and Restring Event at Bellamusic

Local musicians are invited to attend a free recycle and restring event at Bellamusic in Bell on April 16, 2020 from 11:00 am to 8:30 pm. Sponsored by D’Addario® and international recycling company TerraCycle®, musicians can bring any old instrument strings for recycling and get their electric or acoustic guitars restrung with D’Addario NYXL or Nickel Bronze Acoustic strings. Old strings collected during the event will be recycled through Playback, D’Addario’s free, national recycling program. image.png

Diaper Composting: Is This New Service Right for Your Family?

Environmentally aware parents think long and hard before saying yes to cloth or disposable diapers. They want to make the right decision for their baby, lifestyle, and earth.   For those who have never been satisfied with their diaper situation or who are just learning about their choices, there is something new to consider — a diaper composting service.   Composting Diapers by Mail   DYPER has launched the first national diaper composting service. You read that right — there is a service that takes your dirty disposable diapers off your hands and composts them for the greater good.   DYPER, a subscription-based bamboo diaper company, has partnered with TerraCycle, a waste management company, to offer REDYPER. DYPER customers can opt-in to the REDYPER service, receive a specially engineered waste-grade box, label, and materials, and send their soiled diapers back to TerraCycle for composting.   Can you really send poopy diapers through the mail? Do you even want to think about packing them up and putting them in a box? DYPER is counting on eco-conscious parents to do just that.   “We’re committed to making diapering effortless for parents, gentle for babies, and kind to the planet,” says Sergio Radovcic, the CEO of DYPER. “It wasn’t easy to develop the most fully compostable diaper ever created. But, we are thrilled that our partnership with TerraCycle will make it easy for families to keep their used diapers out of landfills.”   The Logistics of REDYPER   Your baby knows what to do in those carefully procured bamboo diapers. Parents want to responsibly dispose of a necessary evil. The logistics:  
  • Enroll in a DYPER monthly subscription.
  • Opt-in to the REDYPER program.
  • Receive bags and a specially designed box engineered to the strictest United Nations HazMat shipping standards.
  • Pack your box with soiled diapers.
  • When the box is full, download a prepaid shipping label and mail the diapers.
  Composting DYPER diapers at home has always been possible. The TerraCycle partnership now saves families the time and effort of do-it-yourself composting and puts the burden on the REDYPER service, trusting that they are still doing their part for the environment without adding to the 20 billion diapers added to U.S. landfills every year. The waste composted through the program will be used in specialized applications, such as for vegetation in highway medians.   All the Questions   Eco-friendliness in the baby market isn’t always easy to come by, especially when you’re talking diapers. When a viable solution to disposable diapers in landfills hits the market, it’s worth looking into. But a big question is: What’s the carbon footprint of all that shipping?   The new diapers are shipped to the customer. Customers ship dirty diapers back in a separate and carefully manufactured box for composting. That’s a lot of back and forth — are the environmental benefits of composting the diapers negated by the CO2 impact of shipping?   For each shipment of diapers you receive, DYPERS purchases carbon offsets to help reforestation efforts. Subscribers receive an electronic certificate showing the amount of carbon offsets purchased on their behalf each time a shipment is sent.   Maybe for some parents, the environmental impact of their mailing habits is small compared to the huge impact just one baby’s three or so years’ worth of diapers can make in a landfill.   And possibly the carbon offsets that DYPERS purchases for each customer delivery help reduce concerns over all that shipping. But regardless of the environmental implications, it just might take a little convincing to get past the idea of a box full of poopy diapers — where do you store that in your house while your baby is working hard to fill it up?

THE GROCERY AND DELIVERY SERVICES MAKING ZERO-WASTE EASIER THAN RECYCLING

Take a look in your garbage and recycling bins: I bet a majority of it is food-related packaging and disposables. As a sustainability writer, advocate, consultant, and educator, I encourage people to check out their garbage (yeah, I’m that person), and one of the things that often comes up in conversation is how to shop in bulk and avoid packaging in our increasingly scarce grocery hauls.   Zero-waste grocery options are popping up all over and are making it easier than ever to shop waste-free. These shops and delivery services streamline the process of shopping and make living zero-waste a lot more feasible for the average consumer.   Package-free grocery stores like Precycle in Brooklyn and Nada in Vancouver are known for offering produce, spices, nuts, and even milk and eggs without packaging. According to Nada’s website, they’ve diverted over 30,000 containers from ending up in landfill or the recycling stream. They also house an in-store zero-waste cafe that uses surplus from the produce department, creating a circular economy within their shop.   And for those who like the convenience of shopping from home (many of us these days), Denver-based zero-waste delivery service Infinity Goods was founded by Ashwin Ramdas and co-founder Dani McClean to make zero-waste shopping as easy as possible.   “Dani and I were trying to live a plastic-free life — but with groceries, it was almost impossible,” explains Ramdas. “So much food comes in single-use packaging, we had to give up many of the foods we loved like pasta and ice cream, not to mention lugging around containers to multiple stores that had limited selections. We knew that if it was this difficult for us, it was that difficult for anyone trying to cut down on waste.”   Infinity Goods offers same-day delivery and provides provisions well beyond the bulk section, delivering hard-to-find package free items such as tofu, energy bars, and even ice cream (yes, they delivered me vegan, gluten-free ice cream in a mason jar and my life was basically complete). You save your jars, bags, and even recyclables and give them back on your next delivery, the company ensuring they get reused, properly recycled, or composted if necessary.   While Infinity Goods is currently local to Denver, other initiatives are reaching across the country and the world. The Wally Shop started as a zero-waste delivery service in New York City, and recently raised over $50k to expand its service nationwide.   Loop, founded by TerraCycle CEO Tom Szaky, was started with the mission to make it as easy as possible for consumers to shop in a low-waste manner for their usual goods. Launched in 2019, Loop has partnered with some of the largest companies that are making consumer packaged goods such as Unilever, P&G, and PepsiCo, as well as smaller brands like Burlap & Barrel and Melanin Essentials, to offer some of the most popular food, beverages, supplements, and beauty products in reusable goods. Once you’re done, you simply put your items back in the tote and they pick them up.   This both lowers the barrier to entry and allows consumers to keep enjoying their favorite products in a zero-waste manner. Loop is currently available in the mid-Atlantic, as well as select regions in Europe, with hopes to expand. While zero-waste grocery shopping has felt pretty niche for some time now, with the proliferation of options and larger companies getting on board, zero-waste delivery services such as Loop and Infinity Goods could well rival Amazon’s delivery services.   The important part is that shopping this way be simple — or maybe even easier — for the consumer. “We want to shift the conversation away from personal consumer responsibility,” Ramdas explains. “We will never solve the pollution crisis if we burden each individual with the responsibility of waste management.” And to do my part, I’ll continue to take my ice cream in mason jars, front door style, thank you very much.  

Composting Subscription Service Tackles Nappy Waste

US start-up Dyper has introduced commercial composting to its nappy subscription service to appeal to waste-conscious parents. In 2017, disposable nappies accounted for over 4.2 million tonnes of refuse in the US alone (EPA, 2019).   Dyper has collaborated with US recycling brand TerraCycle to provide parents with hazmat-standard bags and boxes, allowing soiled diapers to be safely sent for centralised composting. The compost can then be used to nourish public vegetation. For parents who compost at home, the website gives information on how to safely and consciously dispose of their products.   The company is building on its eco ethos further; its nappies are made from responsibly sourced bamboo and viscose fibres, which are much kinder to the planet. Traditional options tend to contain harmful substances such as plastics and chemicals. Dyper also offsets its shipping and waste carbon footprint with non-profit Cool Effect to give consumers additional peace of mind.   Dyper launched in 2018 as a diaper subscription service, offering delivery of up to 260 nappies for $68 per month. The new service, named ReDyper, costs an additional $39 per month.   Brands that provide eco-consumers with much-needed sustainable alternatives are sure to win in this time of growing climate consciousness. See Reaching Eco Demographics in our Macro Trend Towards Our Sustainable Future for more on how to appeal to the diverse concerns of green consumers.