ATLANTA (FOX 5 Atlanta) - According to the EPA, the average American produces close to six pounds of trash a day, and only a fraction of that gets recycled. Here's how you an give those things a second life.
Let's start with cell phones. How many do you have stuffed in a drawer? The EPA, again, says fewer than 20 percent are recycled. If you do it, you can help victims of domestic violence through Cellular Recycler and to help active-duty military and vets through a program called "Cell Phones for Soldiers."
Eyeglasses. I have so many of these lying around because, well, I wear glasses not contaccts. Donate them, non-perscription sunglasses, too, because they go to help folks around the world to see. Check out New Eyes for the Needy, a non-profit with a goal to help the poor see.
Same with hearing aids. My daughter wears one so this interests me. The Starkey Hearing Foundation wants this one when my kid outgrows it. It can go to someone without the resources to buy one.
Running shoes. Nike has a re-use program called Re-Use a Shoe Program that accepts old sneakers to make ball courts.
Inhalers. I have these, too. I usually toss these asthma aids into the garbage. Well, don't. Ask your pharmacist if her pharmacy recycles.
Batteries. Do not throw these things away. Check to see if your office has a program for single-use batteries. Many do. Ours does. Many retailers like Home Depot take the re-useable ones.
A few cosmetics lines want your empties. If you use Lush,Mac, Avedaand Kiehl's, save your pots and containers.
Greeting cards. St. Jude's Ranch for Children takes your new and used ones. They recycle and make new ones. Although, one hiccup: They can't take Hallmark, Disney or American Greetings, according to their website, for copyright reasons.
Finally, those juice pouches and other things that come in pouches. A group called "Terra Cycle" wants them. And cigarette butts, too. Yeah, they make new things from those.
Don't overwhelm yourself. It's like dieting. Just make one small change at a time so that you create a new habit, not a new chore. Start with those pouches for juice and laundry pods. Toss them in a bucket until full then recycle. And before you toss out anything now, take to your keyboard and see if there is a way to re-use it before you put it in the garbage can.
“GREEN PALACE”: Heemin Moon’s installation in the former bank vault at BSB Gallery in Trenton showcases three-dimensional shapes incorporating upcycled materials, including a whimsical view of man’s best friend. It is on display through April 13.
Heemin Moon, in collaboration with Dorothy McNee, has created the site-specific installation “Green Palace,” on display in the former bank vault at BSB Gallery at 143 East State Street in Trenton through April 13.
Heemin Moon’s “Green Palace” is an intimate world of exotic creatures, iridescent lighting, metallic finishes, and sustainable materials. This showcase of three-dimensional shapes, incorporating upcycled materials, is a result of Moon’s unique whimsical view of man’s best friend and unlikely wildlife in regal surroundings. His art and color vision were rendered for the special collaboration between BSB Gallery and TerraCycle, the exhibit “Scrapped.”
Heemin Moon is a graphic artist by trade with a bachelor of fine arts in visual design from Gachon University, Seongnam, South Korea.
Moon’s work has been featured in the auction world of Bid Square, on various book covers, and in projects for private companies. Aside from his daily work, his passion is creating three-dimensional shapes using a variety of recycled materials, including paper, textiles, and plastic. Moon has created a variety of animals in paper and ceramic as well as pen and ink sketches that have been featured in exhibitions all over the world.
Moon has worked closely with International Textiles Sourcing, or I.T.S. GROUP, a textile agency owned by collaborator Dorothy McNee. Aside from marketing environmentally-friendly textiles to retailers and designers, her passion is keeping products from landfills, whether its garments, furniture, or textile remnants.
The “Green Palace” installation was designed specifically for the vault at the BSB Gallery. The inspiration came from the original vault doors and the overall space of this restored 1900s bank building. Moon has incorporated a modern attitude with old world charm, glitz, humor, and his unique animal shapes within a human’s domain.
“Scrapped” runs through April 13 at the BSB Gallery. An Earth Month/Closing Reception will take place on Friday, April 12 from 5 to 7 pm.
New Jersey company will recycle more than just carbon fibre soles of your shoes
When Shimano announced its program to collect old cycling shoes, in exchange for a discount on a new pair of shoes, we were curious. What happened to the old shoes?
Shimano’s partner in the recycling project, which concludes on Earth Day 2019, is TerraCycle. The Trenton, New Jersey-based company has its Canadian office in Toronto. It was founded in 2001 by Tom Szaky, a graduate of Toronto’s U.C.C., while he was a student at Princeton. The company produces goods and materials made from waste, focusing on non-recyclable pre-consumer and post-consumer waste.
RELATED: Trade in smelly old cycling shoes for a discount on a new pair with Shimano’s Earth Day initiative
I talked to Dr. Ernie Simpson, Global Vice President of R&D for TerraCycle about the shoe collection program and found out shoes aren’t the only cycling-related waste that can be recycled. The company, which has found a way to make use of the most unlikely kinds of waste, from dirty diapers to chewing gum, can handle much of the garbage created during your typical group ride. From plastic and foil energy gel wrappers all the way to carbon fibre frames and wheels of a high-end bike, TerraCycle can potentially redirect much of what we think of as fated for the landfill into useful materials.
TerraCycle: Beyond recycling Shimano shoes
Canadian Cycling Magazine: What happens to the collected cycling shoes after they’re dropped off at TerraCycle?
Dr. Ernie Simpson: We separate the uppers from the soles, and we use the rubber soles to make use for surfacing things like playgrounds. For the uppers we can use the leather to make leather tiles or for furniture, if it’s leather, or if it’s a plastic material, we’ll use it to make plastic tiles. So those are the kinds of applications we look at.
We do not incinerate anything that we collect, and we do not landfill anything we collect. Anything TerraCycle collects as a company we find solutions for. If we don’t have enough material to use it in an industrial setting, we will store the material until we get enough so that we can use it efficiently.
A lot of the cycling shoes have carbon fibre soles. Are you able to make use of that material?
Yes. The carbon fibre soles can be shredded and the carbon fibre can be used largely for reinforcing other materials. If the carbon fibre is well prepared, you can actually use that material in, for instance, in golf shafts, or you can actually use it in aerospace. A lot of aerospace plastic uses carbon fibre filling, and some automotive parts are made with carbon fibre fillings. Those are applications that we can look at for recycled carbon fibre.
A lot of products in the cycling industry are made with carbon fibre, including bike frames, wheels and small components. Is there a way shops or customers can send larger carbon fibre items to Terracycle as well?
Sure. Typically what we do is we take a sample in, and we analyze the composition of the sample and we’ll tell you if we have any difficulties trying to recycle that material. Carbon fibre, like all fillers – things like calcium carbonate, glass fibres – all of these are used in specific industry, though the general public may not know some of the specific applications that they go into.
We’ll take a sample in, analyze it to see what the composition is, see what kind of sizing the carbon fibre has. The sizing will tell us what kind of material it can be used in.
I’ve heard from the industry in the past that one of the reasons carbon fibre is hard to recycle is the type of resin used. Is that something you can get past?
Terracycle is a company that actually formulates. Most other recycles don’t formulate. They get a material and they’re hoping to recycle it as is. They’ll get a material that has carbon fibre in it, and they’ll grind it up and they won’t do anything else except maybe pelletize it and sell it as is.
What we do, is we actually formulate. If we need to add anything to the carbon fibre to facilitate it to be used in something else, we can do that. We do not simply get the material and grind it up and pelletize it and say there’s nothing else we can do. That’s not how we operate.
So you are making new material out of the recycled material?
Yes. We formulate it into new materials so that it can be used. That’s the way Terracycle operates. We can take materials, we can compatibilize them, add impact modifiers to make it more ductile, we can clean, wash and sterilize and do everything that’s necessary to produce a clean material, and we can do it to specification.
So let’s say somebody is using carbon fibre in an application. We will produce our material but, before we ship it to a company, we’ll ask for what they’re specifications are to see what they’re currently using and what is currently working for them. Then we formulate our material to meet that specification. So when it goes in to them, it can drop in to the production process as a replacement to new materials rather than having to troubleshoot the material we send them.
RELATED: From ghost fishing to green cycling gear: Axiom makes waves with OceanweaveThere’s a lot of single use plastics and foil that cyclists generate waste from, wrappers and such, that most municipal recycling facilities won’t accept. Does TerraCycle have a separate program for that type of waste?
All the wrappers you’re talking about we consider Number 7 plastic, which is multi-layer constructed films, candy wrappers, juice pouches, bottles that are multi-layer. When TerraCycle came into existence 10 years ago, Tom Szaky decided to concentrate on No.7 plastics because prior to us coming into the business all the No.7 plastics were either incinerated or buried in dump sites. One of the things we did was to create new processes for recycling No.7 materials. We’ve done that successfully. Some other things we’ve recycled include dirty diapers; chewing gum, cigarette filters, potato chip bags that are aluminized. All these materials that before were put in dump sites or incinerated, we found processes to run on them and use them in new applications.
What does the No.7 plastic end up as?
Because a lot of them are made with aluminum films, we do a lot of things like use them to make plastic lumber. Big industries are looking at trying to make lumber from plastic and there are a number of large companies that already do that. So we have created a lot of buzz with our No.7 plastic material in making, garden framings, outdoor benches and tables, collection bins for parks and rest areas. All of these can be outdoors for 25 years without having to paint them every afternoon and twice on Sundays, you know? They can withstand all kinds of environmental conditions and still look fairly decent when they’re maintained and cleaned up. That’s where a lot of No.7 plastic goes, and we’ve done that in a lot of countries from Europe to Canada, Mexico and Japan.
TerraCycle’s collection program is available across Canada through their Zero Waste Boxes. Consumers, retailers and event organizers can purchase the box, which covers the cost of inbound and outbound shipping and the cost of processing the material. There are Zero Waste Boxes for sporting goods, for plastic packaging, and even a special program for the pods, discs and capsules from your pre-ride coffee.
Believe it or not, but I do find razors on the beach. What is surprising is the number of items that one finds on the beach, that can be recycled. Recycling Gillette Razors just adds more items that can be kept out of our landfills.
BOSTON–Gillette (NYSE:PG), in partnership with international recycling leader TerraCycle, announced for the first-time in the United States that all brands of disposable razors, replaceable-blade cartridge units and razor plastic packaging are recyclable on a national-scale.
Through the innovative partnership consumers are invited to recycle their razors in three ways:
Gillette Razor Recycling Program – Participants wishing to recycle their razors from home are invited to sign up on the program page https://www.terracycle.com/en-US/brigades/gillette. When ready to ship their waste, they can simply download a self-funded TerraCycle tracking label, package the razors in a secure, puncture-proof package and send it to TerraCycle for recycling.
Gillette Razor Local Recycling Solutions – Businesses, gyms, colleges, cities and community organizations are invited to become public drop-off points for the Gillette Razor Recycling Program. Participants interested in becoming a drop-off point are invited to sign up on the program page https://www.terracycle.com/en-US/brigades/gillette-local-recycling. After acceptance to the program, they will be sent an exclusive razor recycling bin developed by TerraCycle and Gillette. Once full, they can simply seal and return the bin to TerraCycle via UPS and a new one will be sent back to them. The address listed in the account will be posted on the publicly-available map of local recycling solutions on the Gillette Razor Recycling Program page.
Gillette On Demand Razor Recycling Program – Consumers that participate in the Gillette On Demand subscription service are also invited to recycle their razors through the Gillette Razor Recycling Program. They can sign up on the program page at https://www.terracycle.com/en-US/brigades/gillette-on-demand; when they are ready to ship their waste, they can simply download a self-funded TerraCycle tracking label, repackage the used razors in the Gillette On Demand delivery box and send it to TerraCycle for recycling.
“Through this innovative, first of its kind program, disposable razors, replaceable-blade cartridge units and their associated packaging are now nationally recyclable through the Gillette Recycling Program,” said TerraCycle CEO and founder Tom Szaky. “We are proud to partner with this forward-thinking company to offer consumers a way to divert razor waste from landfills.”
“We are very excited about our partnership with TerraCycle to offer recycling for Gillette, Venus or any razor brand across the U.S. This is an important first step towards sustainable solutions for shaving products and the start of an exciting journey with Gillette and TerraCycle. We are thrilled to bring this option to our consumers in the U.S. and are already working on plans to rollout to more countries very soon,” said Gillette CEO, Gary Coombe.
Organizations that participate in the Gillette Razor Local Recycling Solutions as a public drop-off location earn money for the waste that they recycle through TerraCycle’s Sponsored Waste Recycling Program. For every shipment weighing at least fifteen pounds, collectors earn points that can be used for charity gifts or converted to cash and donated to charities of their choice. The collected packaging will be recycled into a variety of new consumer products such as park benches, bike racks, pet food bowls and recycling bins.
To learn more about the program, please visit http://www.terracycle.com.
ABOUT GILLETTE
For more than 115 years, Gillette has delivered precision technology and unrivalled product performance – improving the lives of over 800 million consumers around the world. From shaving and body grooming, to skin care and sweat protection, Gillette offers a wide variety of products including razors, shave gel (gels, foams and creams), skin care, after shaves, antiperspirants, deodorants and body wash. For more information and the latest news on Gillette, visit www.gillette.com. To see our full selection of products, visit www.gillette.com. Follow Gillette on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.
ABOUT PROCTER & GAMBLE
P&G serves consumers around the world with one of the strongest portfolios of trusted, quality, leadership brands, including Always®, Ambi Pur®, Ariel®, Bounty®, Charmin®, Crest®, Dawn®, Downy®, Fairy®, Febreze®, Gain®, Gillette®, Head & Shoulders®, Lenor®, Olay®, Oral-B®, Pampers®, Pantene®, SK-II®, Tide®, Vicks®, and Whisper®. The P&G community includes operations in approximately 70 countries worldwide. Please visit https://www.pg.com/ for the latest news and information about P&G and its brands.
ABOUT TERRACYCLE
TerraCycle is an innovative waste management company with a mission to eliminate the idea of waste®. Operating nationally across 21 countries, TerraCycle partners with leading consumer product companies, retailers, cities, and facilities to recycle products and packages, from dirty diapers to cigarette butts, that would otherwise end up being landfilled or incinerated. In addition, TerraCycle works with leading consumer product companies to integrate hard to recycle waste streams, such as ocean plastic, into their products and packaging. TerraCycle has won over 200 awards for sustainability and has donated over $44 million to schools and charities since its founding 15 years ago. To learn more about TerraCycle or get involved in its recycling programs, please visit www.terracycle.com.
Believe it or not, but I do find razors on the beach. What is surprising is the number of items that one finds on the beach, that can be recycled. Recycling Gillette Razors just adds more items that can be kept out of our landfills.
Not common, but enough to make an impact.
BOSTON–Gillette (NYSE:PG), in partnership with international recycling leader TerraCycle, announced for the first-time in the United States that all brands of disposable razors, replaceable-blade cartridge units and razor plastic packaging are recyclable on a national-scale.
Through the innovative partnership consumers are invited to recycle their razors in three ways:
Gillette Razor Recycling Program – Participants wishing to recycle their razors from home are invited to sign up on the program page https://www.terracycle.com/en-US/brigades/gillette. When ready to ship their waste, they can simply download a self-funded TerraCycle tracking label, package the razors in a secure, puncture-proof package and send it to TerraCycle for recycling.
Gillette Razor Local Recycling Solutions – Businesses, gyms, colleges, cities and community organizations are invited to become public drop-off points for the Gillette Razor Recycling Program. Participants interested in becoming a drop-off point are invited to sign up on the program page https://www.terracycle.com/en-US/brigades/gillette-local-recycling. After acceptance to the program, they will be sent an exclusive razor recycling bin developed by TerraCycle and Gillette. Once full, they can simply seal and return the bin to TerraCycle via UPS and a new one will be sent back to them. The address listed in the account will be posted on the publicly-available map of local recycling solutions on the Gillette Razor Recycling Program page.
Gillette On Demand Razor Recycling Program – Consumers that participate in the Gillette On Demand subscription service are also invited to recycle their razors through the Gillette Razor Recycling Program. They can sign up on the program page at https://www.terracycle.com/en-US/brigades/gillette-on-demand; when they are ready to ship their waste, they can simply download a self-funded TerraCycle tracking label, repackage the used razors in the Gillette On Demand delivery box and send it to TerraCycle for recycling.
“Through this innovative, first of its kind program, disposable razors, replaceable-blade cartridge units and their associated packaging are now nationally recyclable through the Gillette Recycling Program,” said TerraCycle CEO and founder Tom Szaky. “We are proud to partner with this forward-thinking company to offer consumers a way to divert razor waste from landfills.”
“We are very excited about our partnership with TerraCycle to offer recycling for Gillette, Venus or any razor brand across the U.S. This is an important first step towards sustainable solutions for shaving products and the start of an exciting journey with Gillette and TerraCycle. We are thrilled to bring this option to our consumers in the U.S. and are already working on plans to rollout to more countries very soon,” said Gillette CEO, Gary Coombe.
Organizations that participate in the Gillette Razor Local Recycling Solutions as a public drop-off location earn money for the waste that they recycle through TerraCycle’s Sponsored Waste Recycling Program. For every shipment weighing at least fifteen pounds, collectors earn points that can be used for charity gifts or converted to cash and donated to charities of their choice. The collected packaging will be recycled into a variety of new consumer products such as park benches, bike racks, pet food bowls and recycling bins.
To learn more about the program, please visit http://www.terracycle.com.
The new integrated bioplastic packaging debuted at Global Pet Expo 2019.
Braskem, the largest thermoplastics polyolefins producer in the Americas, and the leading producer of biopolymers in the world has partnered with Earth Animal, purveyor of health improving veterinary formulated products, to announce a new sustainable packaging initiative using Braskem’s sugarcane based I’m green Polyethylene (PE) biopolymer.
“Earth Animal has always been passionate about how, why, and what we do, and for us, we have felt that sustainability is a major part of our DNA,” said Stephanie Volo, VP of Marketing and Sustainability for Earth Animal.
“For over 40 years, our promise has been to preserve and enhance the quality of life for animals, people and the earth. And, partnering with Peel Plastics and Braskem to design and develop our Wisdom Dog Food packaging using the I’m green Polyethylene biopolymer was a natural fit given each company’s commitment to sustainability. We couldn’t be happier with the result,” added Volo.
Since 1979, Earth Animal has been dedicated to helping dog and cat parents achieve their animals’ health and healing objectives. As part of this commitment, Earth Animal is launching Dr. Bob Goldstein’s Wisdom dog food, crafted in small batches, and made with humanely, American-raised poultry, organic fruits and vegetables, as well as Vitality Cubes filled with essential vitamins and minerals. Each ingredient is thoughtfully sourced and using their patented wind technology, carefully air-dried to preserve essential nutrients, without the use of high temperatures or pressure, which can degrade the nutritional benefits of the ingredients.
Earth Animal will include at least 30% bioplastic packaging material into every bag of new line of Dr. Bob Goldstein’s Wisdom Dog Food, supporting their overall commitment to improved environmental sustainability and carbon reduction. To further enhance the environmental profile of the new more sustainable packaging, Earth Animal is partnering with TerraCycle in order to provide an end-of-life package recycling program.
Joe Jankowski, Commercial Manager for Braskem’s Renewables team in North America, stated, “With Earth Animal’s passion for sustainability and Peel Plastics expertise in packaging innovation, we are excited to partner with them both to bring the benefits of Braskem’s I’m green Polyethylene biopolymer to Dr. Bob’s Wisdom product launch.
Because transparency, quality, and sustainability are at the core of Earth Animal’s business, we are pleased to help bring that same approach to an exterior product packaging that resonates with consumers increasing desire for more sustainable materials and recyclability.”
Earth Animal’s Dr. Bob Goldstein’s Wisdom dog food line is launching in turkey and chicken recipe flavors packaged in one, three and ten-pound bags. The whole Wisdom line will be available at leading independent pet specialty stores throughout New England, the Mid-Atlantic and Pacific Northwest and online atwww.earthanimal.com in April 2019.
Braskem's I'm green Polyethylene is a bio-based resin made from ethanol, a renewable and sustainable resource produced from Brazilian sugarcane. I'm green Polyethylene retains the same properties, performance and application versatility of fossil fuel derived polyethylene, making it an ideal drop-in substitute for conventional oilbased polyethylene. Cultivation of sugarcane utilized in the production of I'm green Polyethylene captures carbon dioxide (CO2) and releases oxygen (O2), which means Braskem’s bioplastic has a negative carbon footprint. From a cradle-to-gate life-cycle perspective, every ton of I’m green Polyethylene used in the production of packaging equates to 3.09 tons of CO2 captured from the atmosphere.
With over 40 years of experience as a recognized leader in flexible packaging solutions and process innovation, Peel Plastics has developed extensive knowhow into the unique packaging requirements and technologies of the pet food business. The Peel Plastics team worked with Earth Animal and Braskem to design, develop and integrate the I’m green Polyethylene biopolymer into a new packaging solution that maintains all the performance characteristics required, while delivering a solution that is better for the environment.
Weijia Zhang, Business Development Manager of Peel Plastic Products, commented, “with an emphasis on delivering maximum nutrition to pets and pet parents, Earth Animal’s packaging requirements aligned perfectly with the properties of I’m green Polyethylene. We are excited to be able to combine high performing materials with our production expertise to deliver a package dedicated to meeting consumer and market needs.”
Recycling Today’s sustainability alert is a weekly roundup of sustainability news and announcements.
TerraCycle, Mountain House announce free packaging recycling program
Mountain House, Tangent, Oregon, and TerraCycle, Trenton, New Jersey, have partnered to offer consumers a free, easy way to recycle packaging from the freeze-dried food company’s product line.
Mountain House labels itself as the gold-standard brand of camping and backpacking food.
Through the Mountain House Recycling Program, consumers can send in their empty pouches to be recycled for free. Consumers can sign up on the TerraCycle program page and then mail in the packaging using a prepaid shipping label.
Once collected, the packaging is cleaned and processed into a rigid plastic that can be molded into new recycled products.
Additionally, for every pound of material shipped to TerraCycle, collectors can earn $1 to donate to a nonprofit, school or charitable organization of their choice.
“Mountain House is giving their customers the unique opportunity to minimize their environmental impact by offering them a way to responsibly dispose of the packaging from their freeze-dried meals,” TerraCycle CEO Tom Szaky says. “In turn, by participating in the Mountain House Recycling Program, customers are one step closer to truly minimizing their environmental impact.”
The Mountain House Recycling Program is open to any interested individual, school, office, or community organization.
In other TerraCycle news, Gillette, Boston, Massachusetts, customers will now be able to recycle disposable razors, replaceable-blade cartridge units and associated packaging nationally through a similar program and partnership with TerraCycle.
Through the Gillette Recycling Program, participants can sign up for the program on TerraCycle’s website, package the razors in a secure, puncture proof package and send it to TerraCycle for recycling. Community organizations are also invited to set up public drop-off locations to support the program. TerraCycle and Gillette will provide an exclusive razor recycling bin.
Starbucks trials recyclable cups
Starbucks announced customers in New York, San Francisco, Seattle, Vancouver and London will help test a few different cups that will be both recyclable and compostable. The recyclable cup designs are a result of the NextGen Cup Challenge, in which 12 winners were announced February.
Through the challenge, Starbucks, which is moving towards a goal to eliminate plastic straws from all stores worldwide by 2020, challenged brands, including Coca-Cola Company and McDonald’s, to develop recycling solutions for paper cups.
In addition, Starbucks will roll out new lightweight, recyclable strawless lids to all stores in the United States and Canada in the next year, while strawless lids for cold drinks were rolled out in select stores last year. Starbucks says it is also testing some of the NextGen winner’s solutions that could apply to straws.
Growing the Mr. Trash Wheel project
Invented by John Kellet in May 2014 and maintained by Waterfront Partnership as part of its Healthy Harbor Initiative, the solar-powered Mr. Trash Wheel collects litter and debris from Baltimore’s Inner Harbor. The trash wheel project has collected and prevented more than one million pounds of discarded material, including plastic bags, foam containers and water bottles, from entering the oceans since its installation.
The river’s current provides power to turn the water wheel, which lifts waste and debris from the water and deposits it into a dumpster barge. When the dumpster is full, the material is taken to a waste-to-energy plant, where it is burned to generate power for Maryland homes.
According to a spokesperson for the initiative, Waterfront Partnership holds occasional “dumpster dives” to sort and recycle the collected plastics and polystyrene, but currently there are no plans to increase recycling of the material.
“The Healthy Harbor team always says that the ultimate goal is for the trash wheel family to go out of business,” the spokesperson says.
Two additional trash wheels have been installed in Baltimore with a fourth wheel in the planning stages for Gwynn's Falls, Baltimore. Beyond Baltimore, San Francisco Bay Area and Ballona Creek, California, have started the fundraising process to install trash wheels, with a goal to launch the projects by spring 2020.
Recycling Today’s sustainability alert is a weekly roundup of sustainability news and announcements.
TerraCycle, Mountain House announce free packaging recycling program
Mountain House, Tangent, Oregon, and TerraCycle, Trenton, New Jersey, have partnered to offer consumers a free, easy way to recycle packaging from the freeze-dried food company’s product line.
Mountain House labels itself as the gold-standard brand of camping and backpacking food.
Through the Mountain House Recycling Program, consumers can send in their empty pouches to be recycled for free. Consumers can sign up on the TerraCycle program page and then mail in the packaging using a prepaid shipping label.
Once collected, the packaging is cleaned and processed into a rigid plastic that can be molded into new recycled products.
Additionally, for every pound of material shipped to TerraCycle, collectors can earn $1 to donate to a nonprofit, school or charitable organization of their choice.
“Mountain House is giving their customers the unique opportunity to minimize their environmental impact by offering them a way to responsibly dispose of the packaging from their freeze-dried meals,” TerraCycle CEO Tom Szaky says. “In turn, by participating in the Mountain House Recycling Program, customers are one step closer to truly minimizing their environmental impact.”
The Mountain House Recycling Program is open to any interested individual, school, office, or community organization.
In other TerraCycle news, Gillette, Boston, Massachusetts, customers will now be able to recycle disposable razors, replaceable-blade cartridge units and associated packaging nationally through a similar program and partnership with TerraCycle.
Through the Gillette Recycling Program, participants can sign up for the program on TerraCycle’s website, package the razors in a secure, puncture proof package and send it to TerraCycle for recycling. Community organizations are also invited to set up public drop-off locations to support the program. TerraCycle and Gillette will provide an exclusive razor recycling bin.
Starbucks trials recyclable cups
Starbucks announced customers in New York, San Francisco, Seattle, Vancouver and London will help test a few different cups that will be both recyclable and compostable. The recyclable cup designs are a result of the NextGen Cup Challenge, in which 12 winners were announced February.
Through the challenge, Starbucks, which is moving towards a goal to eliminate plastic straws from all stores worldwide by 2020, challenged brands, including Coca-Cola Company and McDonald’s, to develop recycling solutions for paper cups.
In addition, Starbucks will roll out new lightweight, recyclable strawless lids to all stores in the United States and Canada in the next year, while strawless lids for cold drinks were rolled out in select stores last year. Starbucks says it is also testing some of the NextGen winner’s solutions that could apply to straws.
Growing the Mr. Trash Wheel project
Invented by John Kellet in May 2014 and maintained by Waterfront Partnership as part of its Healthy Harbor Initiative, the solar-powered Mr. Trash Wheel collects litter and debris from Baltimore’s Inner Harbor. The trash wheel project has collected and prevented more than one million pounds of discarded material, including plastic bags, foam containers and water bottles, from entering the oceans since its installation.
The river’s current provides power to turn the water wheel, which lifts waste and debris from the water and deposits it into a dumpster barge. When the dumpster is full, the material is taken to a waste-to-energy plant, where it is burned to generate power for Maryland homes.
According to a spokesperson for the initiative, Waterfront Partnership holds occasional “dumpster dives” to sort and recycle the collected plastics and polystyrene, but currently there are no plans to increase recycling of the material.
“The Healthy Harbor team always says that the ultimate goal is for the trash wheel family to go out of business,” the spokesperson says.
Two additional trash wheels have been installed in Baltimore with a fourth wheel in the planning stages for Gwynn's Falls, Baltimore. Beyond Baltimore, San Francisco Bay Area and Ballona Creek, California, have started the fundraising process to install trash wheels, with a goal to launch the projects by spring 2020.
FREE INSTRUMENT RESTRING/RECYCLING EVENT HOSTED BY INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC CENTER
Local musicians are invited to attend a free recycle and restring event at Instrumental Music Center in Tucson, AZ on Monday April 8, 2019 from 12:00 PM - 6:00 PM. Sponsored by D’Addario and 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.
Gillette, in partnership with international recycling leader and Trenton-based TerraCycle, announced for the first-time in the United States, that all brands of disposable razors, replaceable-blade cartridge units and razor plastic packaging are recyclable on a national-scale.
Through the innovative partnership consumers are invited to recycle their razors in three ways:
• Gillette Razor Recycling Program – Participants wishing to recycle their razors from home are invited to sign up on the program page https://www.terracycle.com/en-US/brigades/gillette. When ready to ship their waste they can simply download a self-funded TerraCycle tracking label, package the razors in a secure, puncture proof package and send it to TerraCycle for recycling.
• Gillette Razor Local Recycling Solutions – Businesses, gyms, colleges, cities and community organizations are invited to become public drop-off points for the Gillette Razor Recycling Program. Participants interested in becoming a drop-off point are invited to sign up on the program page https://www.terracycle.com/en-US/brigades/gillette-local-recycling. After acceptance to the program, they will be sent an exclusive razor recycling bin developed by TerraCycle and Gillette. Once full, they can simply seal and return the bin to TerraCycle via UPS and a new one will be sent back to them. The address listed in the account will be posted on the publicly available map of local recycling solutions on the Gillette Razor Recycling Program page.
• Gillette On Demand Razor Recycling Program – Consumers that participate in the Gillette On Demand subscription service are also invited to recycle their razors through the Gillette Razor Recycling Program. They can sign up on the program page at https://www.terracycle.com/enUS/brigades/gillette-on-demand, when they are ready to ship their waste they can simply download a self-funded TerraCycle tracking label, repackage the used razors in the On Demand delivery box and send it to TerraCycle for recycling.
“Through this innovative, first of its kind program, disposable razors, replaceable-blade cartridge units and their associated packaging are now nationally recyclable through the Gillette Recycling Program,” said TerraCycle CEO and founder Tom Szaky. “We are proud to partner with this forward-thinking company to offer consumers a way to divert razor waste from landfills.”
“We are very excited about our partnership with TerraCycle to offer recycling for Gillette, Venus or any razor brand across the U.S. This is an important first step towards sustainable solutions for shaving products and the start of an exciting journey with Gillette and TerraCycle. We are thrilled to bring this option to our consumers in the U.S. and are already working on plans to rollout to more countries very soon.” said Gillette CEO, Gary Coombe.
Organizations that participate in the Gillette Razor Local Recycling Solutions as a public drop-off location earn money for the waste that they recycle through TerraCycle’s Sponsored Waste Recycling Program. For every shipment weighing at least fifteen pounds, collectors earn points that can be used for charity gifts or converted to cash and donated to charities of their choice. The collected packaging will be recycled into a variety of new consumer products such as park benches, bike racks, pet food bowls and recycling bins.
To learn more about the program, please visit http://www.terracycle.com.