Global eye health company Bausch + Lomb has launched a national recycling program to provide Americans with a responsible option for their otherwise non-recyclable contact lenses and blister packs. By partnering with recycling company TerraCycle to create
the Bausch + Lomb ONE by ONE recycling program, Bausch + Lomb gives contact lens wearers the ability to recycle used Biotrue ONEday brand contact lenses and blister packs, and lenses and packs from other Bausch + Lomb brands, as well as all other contact lens brands.
Contact lenses and blister packs are considered non-recyclable through municipal facilities mainly because they are too small to be captured by standard sorting machinery. Through the Bausch + Lomb ONE by ONE recycling program, contact lenses and blister packs are now 100% recyclable, providing a nationwide solution to prevent these items from entering the waste stream, at zero cost to the consumer.
Once collected, contact lenses and blister packs are separated and cleaned. The metal layers of the blister packs are recycled separately, while the contact lenses and plastic blister-pack components are melted into plastic that can be remolded to make recycled products. For every pound of accepted Biotrue ONEday and other Bausch + Lomb brand packaging sent through this program, a $1 donation will be made to Optometry Giving Sight, a global fundraising initiative that targets the prevention of blindness and impaired vision.
“Bausch + Lomb is continuously striving to become a more environmentally sustainable company in order to preserve not only the well-being of our patients, but also of our environment,” saysy Guy Guglielmino, Vice President of Marketing, Vision Care, Bausch + Lomb. “With the launch of our Bausch + Lomb ONE by ONE recycling program, we are asking people to join us to take ONE small step each day to help the environment, so that together we can create a significant positive impact.”
The Bausch + Lomb ONE by ONE recycling program is open to any interested individual, eyecare professional, or organization.
Global eye health company Bausch + Lomb has launched a national recycling program to provide Americans with a responsible option for their otherwise non-recyclable contact lenses and blister packs. By partnering with recycling company TerraCycle to create
the Bausch + Lomb ONE by ONE recycling program, Bausch + Lomb gives contact lens wearers the ability to recycle used Biotrue ONEday brand contact lenses and blister packs, and lenses and packs from other Bausch + Lomb brands, as well as all other contact lens brands.
Contact lenses and blister packs are considered non-recyclable through municipal facilities mainly because they are too small to be captured by standard sorting machinery. Through the Bausch + Lomb ONE by ONE recycling program, contact lenses and blister packs are now 100% recyclable, providing a nationwide solution to prevent these items from entering the waste stream, at zero cost to the consumer.
Once collected, contact lenses and blister packs are separated and cleaned. The metal layers of the blister packs are recycled separately, while the contact lenses and plastic blister-pack components are melted into plastic that can be remolded to make recycled products. For every pound of accepted Biotrue ONEday and other Bausch + Lomb brand packaging sent through this program, a $1 donation will be made to Optometry Giving Sight, a global fundraising initiative that targets the prevention of blindness and impaired vision.
“Bausch + Lomb is continuously striving to become a more environmentally sustainable company in order to preserve not only the well-being of our patients, but also of our environment,” saysy Guy Guglielmino, Vice President of Marketing, Vision Care, Bausch + Lomb. “With the launch of our Bausch + Lomb ONE by ONE recycling program, we are asking people to join us to take ONE small step each day to help the environment, so that together we can create a significant positive impact.”
The Bausch + Lomb ONE by ONE recycling program is open to any interested individual, eyecare professional, or organization.
Em 2012 a Faber-Castell estabeleceu uma parceria com a TerraCycle e lançou um programa de coleta que permite a transformação de instrumentos de escrita em matéria prima reciclada que substitui o material virgem que seria utilizado e evita o descarte de resíduos no meio ambiente.
Em sua 34ª edição, as empresas ganhadoras foram AES Holdings Brasil, Blue Sol, Boticário, Braskem, C&A, CELPE, Dow, Habitar Construções Inteligentes, Itaú Unibanco, Korin, Orbenk, Precon, Rhodia, RL Sistemas de Higiene, TerraCycle do Brasil.
Entre os 71 trabalhos inscritos neste ano, enviados por mais de 61 empresas, a Blue Sol teve a honra de dividir o prêmio com algumas das maiores companhias do país, como: AES Holdings Brasil, Boticário, Braskem, C&A, CELPE, Dow, Habitar Construções Inteligentes, Itaú Unibanco, Korin, Orbenk, Precon, Rhodia, RL Sistemas de Higiene, TerraCycle do Brasil
A campanha faz parte do Programa Nacional da Scotch-Brite que se juntou à TerraCycle para criar um programa de reciclagem de esponjas de limpeza de uso doméstico e de escovas de dentes e suas respectivas embalagens.
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1 Degree, News Corp Australia’s Environmental Sustainability Initiative, held a Zero Waste Expo during Planet Ark’s National Recycling Week. A video was made during the Expo featuring TerraCycle and other environmental businesses and organisations.
Diferente de outros resíduos, a reciclagem de esponjas custa caro e, por isso, até então não eram consideradas material viável para reciclar, como explica Renata Ross, gerente de relacionamento da TerraCycle Brasil, empresa responsável pelo projeto.