TERRACYCLE NEWS

ELIMINATING THE IDEA OF WASTE®

Dietze Music’s Free Restring/Recycling Event Sponsored by D’Addario and TerraCycle in Lincoln

DIETZE MUSIC’S FREE RESTRING/RECYCLING EVENT SPONSORED BY D’ADDARIO AND TERRACYCLE
Local musicians are invited to attend a free recycle and restring event at Dietze Music in Lincoln, NE on Saturday April 6, 2019 from 10:00 AM - 2:00 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.

On a roll…it’s the Friday Blog!

The Entertainer has dominated toy headlines again this week – it really is on a roll at the moment. Fresh from last week’s acquisition of Early Learning Centre, this week saw the release of the retailer’s 2018 results – and a very positive set of figures they were too. Total sales climbed by 21.7% to £197m, while profit increased by 31% to £15m. When you take into account the current retail climate, this is a mightily impressive performance. The Entertainer has certainly come a long way since it first opened in 1980; its turnover in year one was a mere £100,000.   I was privileged to be the only journalist invited to attend The Entertainer’s internal business update at which the results were first unveiled, and there were some fascinating statistics beyond the headlines. Sales increases came across the board; stores achieved a like-for-like growth of 17.3%, while sales via its Tosyhop.co.uk website grew by 38% across the whole year and a massive 50% over the peak festive trading period. The deal with Matalan to curate its toy offering added £4.5m to the turnover, while international growth continued apace via 32 new store openings. The Entertainer is looking to open a further 27 stores in the international market this year, in territories including India, Malaysia and UAE. Its UK store opening target is slightly more modest – 12 new stores are planned over the next 12 months – which Gary Grant describes as “a prudent approach in the current climate. We need the uncertainty behind us.” That said, the Early Learning Centre deal will certainly boost The Entertainer’s UK presence; there is even talk of standalone Early Learning Centre stores returning to the High Street at some stage. In addition to new store openings, The Entertainer is also being given opportunities to relocate existing stores to better locations, as landlords acknowledge the positive impact its outlets can have on footfall. It’s great to see a specialist toy retailer thriving in a tough year for the High Street – long may it continue and let us hope that other toy retailers can also continue to buck the trend.   One toy brand which has continued its strong showing from 2018 is L.O.L. Surprise! (As a journalist, how annoying is that exclamation mark?). However, its stellar performance – along with that of the collectibles market as a whole – had started to cause a conundrum for some of the more environmentally-aware retailers. Clearly the huge numbers of dolls sold was generating a significant amount of packaging waste, and I started to receive emails from retailers last year, who admitted they were slightly uneasy about this. So it’s no surprise that this week’s announcement from Isaac Larian, confirming that MGA will be partnering with recycling specialist Terracycle on a global recycling scheme to address the excess packaging issue, has been warmly received. Hopefully now that MGA has taken the lead, it may encourage other toy companies to follow suit.   Another huge trend over the past year has been the addition of sequins to a wide range of toy products. This has come to the attention of the Administrative Cooperation Expert Group on Toy Safety within the EU Commission, which has issued guidelines that toy suppliers and retailers would do well to heed – you can read more about that here. Ty, which has been instrumental in popularising the sequin trend, has always been aware of the potential pitfalls. From the start, the company positioned its Flippables range and other sequin products as gift or fashion items rather than toys. However, some of the ‘tributes’ (ahem) that have subsequently jumped on the sequin bandwagon may not have fully considered the ramifications – that may change with this latest pronouncement.   The ongoing Debenhams saga shows no sign of either abating or reaching a resolution. Mike Ashley’s advances have been rebuffed on several occasions, with the latest subtle threat from the retailer – that it would consider putting itself into a pre-pack administration to avoid having to acquiesce to Mr Ashley’s demands – escalating tensions to a whole new level. The leak of this option also puts pressure on its lenders; if Debenhams can secure the £150m it is seeking from backers, a pre-pack administration would no longer be required. With a £50m quarterly rent payment due next Monday, Debenhams appears to be playing a game of brinkmanship which rivals our government’s Brexit strategy for bravado (or stupidity, depending on your perspective).   Disney has finally completed its acquisition of 20th Century Fox. I read a comment on LinkedIn which suggested the move had taken Disney “from a behemoth to a colossus.” It put me in mind of the latest series of Who Wants to be a Millionaire, and in particular the ‘fastest-finger-first’ opening round. If those descriptions came up as options, I would genuinely have no idea whether a behemoth or a colossus was bigger. Either way, while the deal will have a major effect on areas such as movies, broadcast and theme parks, I’m not sure it will have quite the same impact on the licensing business in the short-term. Other than The Simpsons, Fox has struggled with licensing in recent years; arguably, the acquisition just gives Disney an even greater number of middling brands to add to its already ‘full –to-bursting’ portfolio – just what licensees needed (not).   Finally, I’d like to congratulate Little Tikes on its 50th anniversary celebrations, and also the Playtime PR team on its fifth birthday this week. It’s nice to see both companies continuing to thrive and celebrating significant milestones – in Little Tikes’ case, literally, by turning its boardroom into a giant ball pit, with a giant slide set up to propel staff into the 67,000 balls below. I bet there aren’t too many industries where companies mark major anniversaries in such entertaining fashion….we’re already planning what to do to commemorate our 10th anniversary in a couple of years’ time. Watch this space!      

Conheça o Loop: multinacionais embarcam em projeto de embalagens retornáveis

Se você não vivenciou, certamente já viu alguma cena de filme que retrata um antigo sistema de vendas de leite: o leiteiro deixa uma garrafa na porta da casa do cliente e leva as embalagens vazias. Quando eu era criança, tínhamos engradados de garrafas de refrigerante de vidro que precisavam ser entregues na hora de comprar uma cheia. Aqui em Curitiba, o clássico Cini (que tem uma versão sabor gengibirra, já experimentou?) era presença garantida nas festas lá de casa.

Melting sidewalk glaciers reveal Toronto’s dirty secrets

Spring is our most honest season and the sidewalk glaciers that are rapidly receding are the most honest brokers around.   They contain the truth of Toronto and right now the truth is butts. Endless butts. As if preserved in amber, the great spring melt is revealing thousands of cigarette butts on our streets in great piles and in long toxic carpets that will wash into the lakes and rivers if not swept up soon.     A collection of cigarette butts trapped in sidewalk glaciers.  (SHAWN MICALLEF / FOR THE TORONTO STAR)   There’s more than just butts though; the glaciers provide an opportunity for urban archeology of the recent past. Along just one block of College St., the glaciers revealed a baked potato, a giant screw, a notebook, water bottles, clothing, shoes, and an entire Christmas tree that had been, until recently, completely buried.   There are also bikes that were caught in one of the recent blizzards. The lack of snow clearing, coupled with a few warm days, where the snow drifts turned to slush before freezing again, caused bikes parked along the sidewalks to become trapped like woolly mammoths in ice, impossible to move without a pick axe and a lot of muscle.   So there most stayed, not necessarily abandoned, just immobile. They’ll loosen up just as coats and scarves are in this fleeting transition time, when solid ground becomes mud for a few weeks as Toronto goes through its brown period before bits of green appear. Still, like Newfoundland icebergs in July, some of the most resilient sidewalk glaciers will linger on our streets for a while yet.   Pay attention to them as you pass through the city and their unusual beauty may grow on you. They are, of course, filthy, but grit-filled ice, some of it as black as asphalt or charcoal, makes for an exquisite material for accidental sculptures.   They melt and hollow out in strange ways and shapes, creating new dirty ice stalagmites during subsequent freeze-thaw cycles, the worst popsicles you could ever taste.   It’s not often we get to watch something disintegrate on the street. Along some streets that weren’t properly cleared, block-long glaciers lay in the gutter, nearly indistinguishable from the road surface. As they too shrink, tiny rivers of melt water will form mini ravines in them, like how Toronto itself was formed over time.   Like or loath winter, proper snow clearing or not, this time of year reveals how poorly we treat the public realm. Or at least how some of us do. It’s almost boring to write about this and it seems futile: litterbugs are eternal. And yet, it’s such an upsetting thing to witness, in action or in aftermath, it always demands push back. A bicycle frozen in sidewalk ice.   A bicycle frozen in sidewalk ice.  (FOR THE TORONTO STAR)   As a responsible dog owner who sometimes searches for wayward turds on night walks with my iPhone flashlight, the amount of thawing poop in public places right now is distressing too. Who are these people who don’t stoop and scoop? You shame the rest of us. Worse, you shame your canine, an innocent who just needed to go and hoped you’d do the right thing.   Some of it is even bagged. The bagged poop, left out, is a subset of this genre that is most confounding: bag it only to leave it in a snow bank? Why the half measure? This phenomenon happens on hiking trails too: people will bag it then leave it at the trailhead.   As for the cigarette butts, they seem to be the last socially acceptable form of litter. Tolerated, at least. The quick flick of a thumb and finger, a flash of embers, it’s satisfying, I get it. For a brief couple years in the 1990s I smoked. The old, prone to breaking down, Pontiac Sunbird I drove had a lighter and built-in ashtray, but I flicked every butt out the window without a thought. Now that seems reprehensible, but that at the time was normal. Everyone did it.   While butts can be consistently found nearly everywhere, they tend to cluster in front of cafes and bars, the kinds of social spaces where people go outside for a smoke, then flick them a few metres away without thinking. If you stare at just the gutters, you’ll know you’re passing such an establishment without looking up because of all the butts.   Four years ago, a pilot project was started though a partnership between the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, the West Queen West Business Improvement Area, Councillor Mike Layton’s office and a recycling company called TerraCycle. Boxes that smokers could butt out in were installed on poles and businesses emptied them and sent the butts away for recycling. The responsibility was shared, though smokers bear the most. We need more of this.   Spring cleaning, if we still go in for that sort of thing in this low tax city, will return Toronto to its usual state of cleanliness, which isn’t what it once was. That’s a choice we’ve collectively decided to make.   Shawn Micallef is a Toronto-based writer and a freelance contributor for the Star. Follow him on Twitter: @shawnmicallef  

Melting sidewalk glaciers reveal Toronto’s dirty secrets

Spring is our most honest season and the sidewalk glaciers that are rapidly receding are the most honest brokers around.   They contain the truth of Toronto and right now the truth is butts. Endless butts. As if preserved in amber, the great spring melt is revealing thousands of cigarette butts on our streets in great piles and in long toxic carpets that will wash into the lakes and rivers if not swept up soon.     A collection of cigarette butts trapped in sidewalk glaciers.  (SHAWN MICALLEF / FOR THE TORONTO STAR)   There’s more than just butts though; the glaciers provide an opportunity for urban archeology of the recent past. Along just one block of College St., the glaciers revealed a baked potato, a giant screw, a notebook, water bottles, clothing, shoes, and an entire Christmas tree that had been, until recently, completely buried.   There are also bikes that were caught in one of the recent blizzards. The lack of snow clearing, coupled with a few warm days, where the snow drifts turned to slush before freezing again, caused bikes parked along the sidewalks to become trapped like woolly mammoths in ice, impossible to move without a pick axe and a lot of muscle.   So there most stayed, not necessarily abandoned, just immobile. They’ll loosen up just as coats and scarves are in this fleeting transition time, when solid ground becomes mud for a few weeks as Toronto goes through its brown period before bits of green appear. Still, like Newfoundland icebergs in July, some of the most resilient sidewalk glaciers will linger on our streets for a while yet.   Pay attention to them as you pass through the city and their unusual beauty may grow on you. They are, of course, filthy, but grit-filled ice, some of it as black as asphalt or charcoal, makes for an exquisite material for accidental sculptures.   They melt and hollow out in strange ways and shapes, creating new dirty ice stalagmites during subsequent freeze-thaw cycles, the worst popsicles you could ever taste.   It’s not often we get to watch something disintegrate on the street. Along some streets that weren’t properly cleared, block-long glaciers lay in the gutter, nearly indistinguishable from the road surface. As they too shrink, tiny rivers of melt water will form mini ravines in them, like how Toronto itself was formed over time.   Like or loath winter, proper snow clearing or not, this time of year reveals how poorly we treat the public realm. Or at least how some of us do. It’s almost boring to write about this and it seems futile: litterbugs are eternal. And yet, it’s such an upsetting thing to witness, in action or in aftermath, it always demands push back.     A bicycle frozen in sidewalk ice.  (FOR THE TORONTO STAR)   As a responsible dog owner who sometimes searches for wayward turds on night walks with my iPhone flashlight, the amount of thawing poop in public places right now is distressing too. Who are these people who don’t stoop and scoop? You shame the rest of us. Worse, you shame your canine, an innocent who just needed to go and hoped you’d do the right thing.   Some of it is even bagged. The bagged poop, left out, is a subset of this genre that is most confounding: bag it only to leave it in a snow bank? Why the half measure? This phenomenon happens on hiking trails too: people will bag it then leave it at the trailhead.   As for the cigarette butts, they seem to be the last socially acceptable form of litter. Tolerated, at least. The quick flick of a thumb and finger, a flash of embers, it’s satisfying, I get it. For a brief couple years in the 1990s I smoked. The old, prone to breaking down, Pontiac Sunbird I drove had a lighter and built-in ashtray, but I flicked every butt out the window without a thought. Now that seems reprehensible, but that at the time was normal. Everyone did it.   While butts can be consistently found nearly everywhere, they tend to cluster in front of cafes and bars, the kinds of social spaces where people go outside for a smoke, then flick them a few metres away without thinking. If you stare at just the gutters, you’ll know you’re passing such an establishment without looking up because of all the butts.   Four years ago, a pilot project was started though a partnership between the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, the West Queen West Business Improvement Area, Councillor Mike Layton’s office and a recycling company called TerraCycle. Boxes that smokers could butt out in were installed on poles and businesses emptied them and sent the butts away for recycling. The responsibility was shared, though smokers bear the most. We need more of this.   Spring cleaning, if we still go in for that sort of thing in this low tax city, will return Toronto to its usual state of cleanliness, which isn’t what it once was. That’s a choice we’ve collectively decided to make.   Shawn Micallef is a Toronto-based writer and a freelance contributor for the Star. Follow him on Twitter: @shawnmicallef  

Six Ways You Can Reduce Waste at Home

Including tips on how to recycle more than just plastic bottles. woman mending jeans     Believe it or not, reducing the amount of trash you produce doesn't just positively impact the state of our landfills—it can also give your pocketbook a boost. Sure, it takes time to mend items that you can no longer use or to find new ways to repurpose them elsewhere in your home, but the end result is worth it. Recycling is one of the easiest ways to offset the amount of trash you produce and how much you throw out every day. If you simply can't reuse an item—be it old clothing or tarnished kitchenware—consider these six simple alternatives to sending them off to the landfill.  

Mend Your Clothing

In 1929, the average middle-class man owned six work outfits; the average woman, nine—all built to last. The typical American today buys six items of clothing per month. And we dump an awful lot, too: 84 percent of unwanted attire ended up in landfills or in an incinerator in 2012, according to U.S. Environmental Protection Agency data. To streamline what you own (and, ultimately, what you trash), invest in fewer, higher-quality pieces, and when they wear thin, repair them. The Japanese tradition of sashiko is a form of mending that announces itself with artful designs in white thread. The sewing technique leaves shirt plackets and pant knees thicker and more durable. If you don't want to DIY it, shop at retailers that make mending part of their ethos. Nudie Jeans, for instance, offers free repairs on every pair of its jeans for life. Patagonia does the same for all of its gear, in addition to providing repair instructions, selling used and recycled clothing, and even more through its Worn Wear program.  

Drop Off Plastic Bags

Did you know that retailers will actually take back the plastic bags you used to bring your purchases home? The ones that hold groceries, produce, and dry cleaning are all made of high- or low-density polyethylene, which most municipal recyclers can't accept. But many major retailers, including Target and Walmart, offer drop-off bins. Visit how2recycle.info to find participating stores. reusable glass containers    

Start Using Refillable Containers

Back in the day, the milkman picked up empty bottles. We may soon be able to return ice cream and other containers in the same fashion, thanks to programs underway at Nestlé, PepsiCo, Procter & Gamble, Unilever, and several other companies. Together with Terra-Cycle, they're testing a website called Loop, where you can buy food and toiletries in glass, metal, and reusable engineered-plastic vessels and mail them back for more. Nespresso already has a program like this underway: Shoppers can return its pods in prepaid envelopes, where the aluminum gets recycled, and the grounds get composted.   In the meantime, try repurposing glass bottles and jars you have, filling them with food you make or buy in bulk, like grains and beans.  

Turn Denim Into Insulation

Take any stretched, faded, or outdated jeans to J.Crew, Madewell, or a Rag & Bone store. You'll get a discount on a new pair, and the discarded items will get transformed into home insulation as part of these companies' partnerships with Cotton Incorporated's Blue Jeans Go Green initiative.  

Recycle Your Makeup Jars

L'Oréal, Garnier, Burt's Bees, L'Occitane, and more beauty brands are working with the eco-ninjas at TerraCycle to upcycle as much as possible, including tricky mascara tubes. Go to terracycle.com to find a collection point near you (like local drugstores) and drop off your empty packaging. TerraCycle will take it from there.  

Get Composting

Got food scraps? Congratulations: Even in the city, you qualify to transform them into a fertilizer that can help feed the planet. Place fruit and vegetable peels, eggshells, tea leaves, paper tea bags, coffee grounds, and paper filters into an airtight countertop bin to put a lid on the smell—or keep it in a covered bowl in the freezer. Then, take your weekly bag to a municipal site or farmer's market stand, or start a pile in your backyard. Here's how you can get started.  

Shampoo in ocean-plastic bottles

CINCINNATI – Herbal Essences has teamed up with TerraCycle to create recyclable shampoo and conditioner bottles made of 25 per cent beach plastic.   “Plastic floating in our oceans and rivers has been a recent topic for discussion and unless people work to find solutions, it stays just that—a discussion,” says Tom Szaky, TerraCycle CEO.   “By incorporating beach plastic into their bottles, Herbal Essences is showing that they are committed to doing something and leading by example. I look forward to our continued work together to raise awareness and make a bigger difference.”   “Businesses can play an important role in driving and inspiring change in the world,” says Ilaria Resta, North America general manager of P&G Hair Care.   “My team and I are very passionate about driving responsible consumption. Actions like incorporating ocean plastic into our bottles is just one way we are bringing innovative solutions that have a reduced impact on the environment. This is a step towards our long-term vision of using 100 per cent renewable and recycled materials in our products and packaging.”   Three of the Herbal Essences bio:renew Collections  will be available in these innovative, limited-edition Beach Plastic bottles from March to June 2019.   Herbal Essences is continuing to partner with TerraCycle beyond this limited-edition Beach Plastic bottle in a nationwide take-back program to ensure every Herbal Essences bottle can be recycled and not end up in the ocean. The take-back program will begin in time for World Ocean Day on June 8, 2019. Both Herbal Essences and parent company P&G are sponsors of The Ocean Project to grow engagement and action to protect oceans.

Gillette launches recycling campaign to keep razors out of landfills

RICHMOND, VA (WWBT) - Gillette has announced plans to launch the first national program to fully recycle used razors.
The razor brand is launching the campaign alongside TerraCycle, an international recycling company that specializes in hard-to-recycle materials.
Gillette’s campaign will accept all razor blades and cartridges, regardless of brand.
“We are very excited about our partnership with TerraCycle to offer recycling for Gillette, Venus, or any razor brand across the U.S.” Gillette CEO Gary Coombe said in a statement. “This is an important first step toward sustainable solutions for shaving products and the start of an exciting journey with Gillette and TerraCycle.”
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Gillette
✔@Gillette

Recycle any razor, any brand! ♻️ We’ve partnered with TerraCycle to launch the first national program to fully recycle your blades and razors. Find out how to participate at http://spr.ly/6012ETSeE 

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Those who wish to participate in the program can sign up online, and ship materials from their home.
Businesses, organizations and schools can also sign up to become a recycling location.
Participation is only offered to U.S. customers at this time, but Gillette says they are already working on rolling the campaign out in other countries.