TERRACYCLE NEWS

ELIMINATING THE IDEA OF WASTE®

Today Only! Amazon: Save BIG on Yankee Candles from $14 (Reg. $27.99) – FAB Ratings!

Today only, hop over to Amazon and get a deal on up to 50% off Select Yankee Candles. As just one idea, you can score a HOT deal on Yankee Candle Large Jar, Mango Peach Salsa for only $14 (regularly $27.99)!  This Yankee Candle large jar candle is the perfect size for enjoying all your go-to fragrances. At 22 oz., the scented candle provides a long burn to add a pleasant aroma to dinner parties, lazy Saturdays, and a season’s worth of little moments.
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Save BIG on Yankee Candles from $14 (Reg. $27.99) – FAB Ratings!

  • This sweet and zesty fragrance conjures juicy mangoes and peaches livened with citrus, ginger flowers, and pink pepper
  • Long-lasting 110 to 150 hour burn time
  • Quality paraffin grade candle wax delivers a clear, consistent burn
  • 22 ounce scented candle measures 6.6 inches H x 4 inches D
  • Natural fiber candle wick delivers the best burn for each fragrance
  • 100% recyclable in partnership with TerraCycle
  • Amazon Prime members get Free 2-day shipping on most orders and more. Sign up for your FREE 30-day trial HERE!
 

Yankee Candles Sale at Amazon

Yankee Candle is one of the most popular candle brands on the market. They are known for their amazing scents. Buying Yankee Candles can be pricey. We can show you how to get a great deal on Yankee Candles for cheap.image.png
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  • Under a bright blue sky… breathe the clean, earthy, airy scent of a heavenly summer day
  • Housed in an ideal glass jar with lid to preserve the fragrance; removable label for a custom look
  • Curated ingredients and premium wax deliver clean, consistent room-filling aroma
  • Extra long burn life of up to 150 hours; 6.6" tall x 4" diameter (22 oz.)
  • 100% natural fiber cotton wick straightened and centered for a clean, even burn
  • 100% recyclable in partnership with TerraCycle

Childcare Center Combats PPE Waste With Innovative Recycling Solution

HUDSON, QUEBEC / AGILITYPR.NEWS / February 08, 2021 / CPE Treehouse Childcare Centre Recycles Disposable Masks and Gloves with Help of Zero Waste Boxes from TerraCycle®   CPE Treehouse Childcare Centre has partnered with TerraCycle to safely eliminate waste with a convenient solution to recycle traditionally unrecyclable personal protective equipment (PPE) through the Zero Waste Box program.   “Due to the current pandemic, we saw how quickly we were filling up our garbage bags full of PPE and decided that we must stop contributing to this waste,” said Sylvie Roy, Executive Director of CPE Treehouse Childcare Centre. “We hope to instill in our children an understanding of the necessity to eliminate waste in order to ensure a healthy future for our planet.”   By placing Safety Equipment and Protective Gear Zero Waste Boxes in the entrance way to the facility and in the staff room, CPE Treehouse staff members can conveniently remove and recycle their disposable masks and gloves after use. The innovative recycling solution helps the staff to safely handle the increased amount of PPE waste generated in the childcare center.   TerraCycle’s Zero Waste Boxes provide a convenient recycling solution for all types of single-use PPE, which are not recyclable through conventional recycling facilities. When placed in public spaces such as grocery stores, schools and parks, Zero Waste Boxes encourage people to responsibly dispose of their protective gear instead of tossing items on the ground.   When customers return a PPE Zero Waste Box for recycling, it is received at a regional TerraCycle warehouse where the waste is manually sorted by material type. Once the material types have been sorted, the individual waste streams are sent to third party specialty subcontracting facilities for mechanical processing.  After undergoing mechanical processing, the resulting material can be remolded into a variety of new products such as plastic shipping pallets, railroad ties or outdoor furniture.   Any recycling partner who purchases a PPE Zero Waste Box through Shopify can request a certificate of destruction (COD) once a year. The COD certifies the date and weight of the material received and guarantees that it has been properly defaced and recycled. TerraCycle does not incinerate or landfill any of the PPE that is accepted for recycling —all compliant materials are mechanically recycled.
ABOUT US
About CPE Treehouse Childcare Centre CPE Treehouse Childcare Centre’s mission is to meet the unique developmental needs of each young child. Understanding that children learn through play inspires our commitment to develop an environment and curriculum where children are encouraged to play, explore, discover and learn at their own pace and in their own way.   About TerraCycle TerraCycle is an innovative waste management company with a mission to eliminate the idea of waste. Operating nationally across 20 countries, TerraCycle partners with leading consumer product companies, retailers and cities 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. Its new division, Loop, is the first shopping system that gives consumers a way to shop for their favorite brands in durable, reusable packaging. TerraCycle also sells Zero Waste Boxes that are purchased by end users to recycle items in offices, homes, factories and public facilities. TerraCycle has won over 200 awards for sustainability and has donated over $44 million to schools and charities since its founding more than 15 years ago and was named #10 in Fortune magazine’s list of 52 companies

Local Elementary School Takes Action Against PPE Waste Crisis with TerraCycle

BOUCHERVILLE, QUEBEC / AGILITYPR.NEWS / February 08, 2021 / LOCAL ELEMENTARY SCHOOL HELPS COMMUNITY TO RECYCLE THE UNRECYCLABLE AND ADDRESS PPE WASTE   Boucherville Elementary School Reinforces Commitment to Sustainability with Help of Zero Waste Boxes from TerraCycle®   Boucherville Elementary School has partnered with TerraCycle to offer the local community a convenient solution to recycle traditionally unrecyclable PPE, school supplies, and coffee product packaging through the Zero Waste Box program. As an educational institution, Boucherville Elementary School is committed to raising awareness among its student body and parent community about the importance of recycling to protect the planet.   “Every little act counts and just because there is a pandemic doesn’t mean that we have to pause our initiatives,” said Jenny Brousseau, Principal of Boucherville Elementary School. “We cannot imagine just how many masks will be thrown away. It is actually heartbreaking to think about it.”   By placing a Coffee Capsules Zero Waste Box in the break room, a Safety Equipment and Protective Gear Zero Waste Box in the main doorway, as well as the Markers Zero Waste Box, and Alkaline Batteries Zero Waste Box in the office area, Boucherville Elementary helps students, teachers, and parents divert waste from landfills while instilling sentiments of sustainability throughout the community.   Like most plastic packaging, the collected waste would have otherwise been landfilled, incinerated, or may have even contributed to the pollution of marine habitats. The collected packaging will now be recycled into a variety of new products such as park benches, bike racks, shipping pallets and recycling bins.   TerraCycle, the world’s leader in the collection and repurposing of complex waste streams, created the Zero Waste Box program to provide solutions for difficult-to-recycle waste that cannot be recycled through TerraCycle’s brand-sponsored, national recycling programs or via standard municipal recycling.   Boucherville Elementary School hopes its implementation of TerraCycle’s Zero Waste Boxes will help encourage other schools to become mindful of their waste production and prevent “recyclables” from ending up in landfills and oceans.   “We only have one health and so does the earth,” said Brousseau. “We cannot protect one at the detriment of the other!”   More information regarding Boucherville Elementary School can be found by visiting their website, https://www.rsb.qc.ca/school/boucherville-elementary.   When customers return a PPE Zero Waste Box for recycling, it is received at a regional TerraCycle warehouse where the waste is manually sorted by material type. Once the material types have been sorted, the individual waste streams are sent to third party specialty subcontracting facilities for mechanical processing. After undergoing mechanical processing, the resulting material can be remolded into a variety of new products such as plastic shipping pallets, railroad ties or outdoor furniture.   Any recycling partner who purchases a PPE Zero Waste Box through Shopify can request a certificate of destruction (COD) once a year. The COD certifies the date and weight of the material received and guarantees that it has been properly defaced and recycled. TerraCycle does not incinerate or landfill any of the PPE that is accepted for recycling —all compliant materials are mechanically recycled. For more information on TerraCycle, please visit www.TerraCycle.ca. ABOUT US
About Boucherville Elementary School Boucherville Elementary School is a part of the Riverside School Board located in Boucherville, Quebec. One of Quebec’s English school boards, Riverside is committed to providing an engaging, inclusive, adaptive and bilingual environment that empowers learners to achieve their full potential. At Boucherville Elementary, students, staff and community work together to ensure success for all!   About TerraCycle TerraCycle is an innovative waste management company with a mission to eliminate the idea of waste. Operating nationally across 20 countries, TerraCycle partners with leading consumer product companies, retailers and cities 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. Its new division, Loop, is the first shopping system that gives consumers a way to shop for their favorite brands in durable, reusable packaging. TerraCycle also sells Zero Waste Boxes that are purchased by end users to recycle items in offices, homes, factories and public facilities. TerraCycle has won over 200 awards for sustainability and has donated over $44 million to schools and charities since its founding more than 15 years ago and was named #10 in Fortune magazine’s list of 52 companies Changing the World. To learn more about TerraCycle or get involved in its recycling programs, please visit www.TerraCycle.ca.

Save up to 50% on Yankee Candle Large Jar Candles from Amazon Today Only!

image.png Save up to 50% on Yankee Candle Large Jar Candles today only from Amazon! The Mango Peach Salsa Scent is 50% off, now $14.99 (regularly $27.99)! Made from 100% natural fibers. This Yankee Candle large jar candle is the perfect size for enjoying all your go-to fragrances. At 22 oz., the scented candle provides a long burn to add a pleasant aroma to dinner parties, lazy Saturdays, and a season’s worth of little moments. Each candle from Yankee Candle is made in America with premium-grade paraffin candle wax with quality ingredients from around the world, and each wick is straightened by hand to ensure the best quality burn. Ships Free with Prime or a $25.00 order.
  • This sweet and zesty fragrance conjures juicy mangoes and peaches livened with citrus, ginger flowers, and pink pepper
  • Long-lasting 110 to 150 hour burn time
  • Quality paraffin grade candle wax delivers a clear, consistent burn
  • 22 ounce scented candle measures 6.6 inches H x 4 inches D
  • Natural fiber candle wick delivers the best burn for each fragrance
  • 100% recyclable in partnership with TerraCycle

Bioplastics, Biodegradable Plastics, & Compostable Plastics: What’s the Difference?

image.png The global bioplastic market is growing rapidly. Bioplastics, biodegradable plastics, and compostable plastics divert our demand for plastic and help lighten the load on our planet by, theoretically, breaking down in weeks rather than centuries. It’s an important step forward for single-use packaging, but we still encourage you to look for plastic-free options. Let’s dig into the realities of biodegradable plastics. Despite high hopes for these alternatives to help build a circular economy, there seems to be a lot of confusion regarding how to dispose of them properly at their end of life. Do you know the difference between these bioplastics?

Bioplastics Cover a Wide Ground

A wide range of materials falls under the umbrella of bioplastics, which are commonly defined as “biobased, biodegradable, or both.” It might surprise you to know that a bioplastic can be non-biodegradable or contain no bio-based materials. It can even be 100% fossil-based. To complicate matters, a bioplastic “can be any combination of being partially bio-based, fully bio-based, non-bio-based, biodegradable, compostable or non-biodegradable, so long as it is not both non-bio-based and non-biodegradable.” Let’s break it down a little further, shall we?

What Are Bioplastics?

Plastic that is fossil fuel-based and non-biodegradable is what we know as conventional plastic. It takes centuries for most of these plastics to breakdown in the environment, and oil-derived plastics leave toxic byproducts in the soil or water. But if  a plastic is biobased and biodegradable or biobased and non-biodegradable, it can be classed as a bioplastic. Chart showing different types of bioplastics Bioplastics are commonly made of corn starch, cassava, or sugarcane. They provide an alternative to petroleum-based plastic and decompose faster and with fewer leftover toxins. But the idea that these plant-based plastics are natural carries with it big misconceptions. These plant-based plastics’ biomass content releases methane as it decomposes and they act like conventional plastics in the ocean, degrading into microplastics and harming marine life that mistakes it for food. How do you recycle or dispose of bioplastics? Right now, many products in this category are labeled as Plastic #7 (or mixed). They will contaminate waste streams if put into the curbside bin in almost all locations in the U.S. Check the packaging, call your municipality, and browse TerraCycle for alternative recycling programs, but if no one accepts it, you have to toss it. Placing #7 plastic in your recycling bin can ruin plastic recycling processes at the materials recovery facility (MRF) that receives it. Long-term, we need a stronger infrastructure to collect bioplastics and industrial composting facilities to close the loop. Like so much of our recycling infrastructure, plastic recycling is stuck in the late 20th Century.

What Is Biodegradable Plastic?

The term “biodegradable” can also mislead consumers because the process of breaking down the material in a compost pile depends heavily on humidity and temperature. Many plastics that carry this claim will only biodegrade in industrial conditions that reach hot enough temperatures. A few cities, such as San Francisco and Seattle, have invested to ensure their compost programs achieve industrial temperatures, but the vast majority have not. This highlights the need for caution about what you choose to recycle. There are many types of biodegradable plastics, but the most common are starch-based polylactic acid (PLA) and polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHA). PLA can “look and behave like polyethylene (used in plastic films, packing, and bottles), polystyrene (plastic foam and plastic cutlery), or polypropylene (packaging, auto parts, textiles)” while PHA is created by microorganisms that produce plastic from carbon-rich organic material and is used in industrial applications, such as making injection-molded auto parts. Oxodegradable plastics, or conventional petroleum-based plastics with additives that help them break down faster, are another subset of biodegradable plastics. California is the only state with labeling laws to keep the terms separate. How do you recycle or dispose of biodegradable plastics? Contact your municipality to ask if they are eligible for local composting programs, consider TerraCycle’s Zero Waste Box for biodegradable or compostable plastic, or throw them away.

What Is Compostable Plastic?

Compostable plastics are another subset of biodegradable plastics, but while all compostable plastics are biodegradable, not all biodegradable plastics are compostable. These products are generally thought by consumers to be compost at home but that is not the case — it requires industrial composting. Most compostable plastics are biobased and designed to break down within three to six months. Unfortunately, this confusion can lead to littering. While compostable plastics have a smaller carbon footprint, they don’t solve our throwaway culture. How do you recycle or dispose of compostable plastics? Sadly, you can’t compost them. Like biodegradable plastics, compostable plastics do not necessarily break down in all commercial composting facilities. Talk to your municipality about existing or planned composting facilities that can process compostable plastics. Or consider TerraCycle’s option for compostable plastic.

For Now, Treat Bioplastics as Plastic

The reality is, we are creating bioplastics faster than the infrastructure we need for their safe, circular disposal — and multinational brands must lead the way on clear, transparent labeling to educate consumers. Until we establish an end-of-life solution for bioplastics, they’ll end up in the landfills or polluting waterways the same as conventional plastic. That’s why it might be helpful to think of them — for now — as exactly that: plastic. Cut down your plastic use to make the biggest positive impact for the planet.

Duo Resveratrol-Lift, la naturalité au service de l’expertise anti-âge de Caudalie

Avec son nouveau duo Resveratrol-Lift, la marque française propose des soins anti-âge respectueux de la peau et de l’environnement. À l’approche de la quarantaine, la production naturelle de collagène et d’acide hyaluronique s’amenuise, diminuant de 40 % la fermeté de la peau, et entraînant ainsi des rides de plus en plus visibles¹. C’est pourquoi Caudalie a développé un nouveau brevet exclusif, en collaboration avec la Harvard Medical School, pour renforcer le collagène déjà présent dans nos cellules.

Logística reversa para embalagens

A Nestlé e a TerraCycle se uniram para reduzir a presença das embalagens de biscoitos, chocolates e salgadinhos nos aterros sanitários. Feitas por um tipo de plástico metalizado chamado Polipropileno Biorientado (Bopp), o material não atraía a atenção de cooperativas de reciclagem por ser muito leve.

Six easy ways to make your beauty routine more eco-friendly – from simple swaps to handy recycling schemes

Approximately eight million tonnes of plastic makes its way into our oceans each year, and just nine per cent of plastic is recycled worldwide. And the beauty industry – with its large amount of packaging and non-recyclable items such as cotton buds and face wipes – has historically been one of the number one culprits. Fortunately the beauty world is now catching up, with many brands making concerted efforts to adopt more sustainable practices in an effort to limit their impact on the environment. Because of its fiddly packaging and tough formulas, make-up used to be one of the trickiest beauty products to recycle. In fact, Maybelline found that a third of make-up wearers didn’t even know that these products could be recycled. Here to tackle the problem, Maybelline has teamed up with Terracycle to introduce make-up recycling bins in over a thousand Tesco, Boots, Sainsbury’s and Superdrug stores across the country. Simply drop in any old cosmetics, from ANY brand, and you can be sure they’ll be properly recycled. Click here to find your nearest drop-off point.