TERRACYCLE NEWS

ELIMINATING THE IDEA OF WASTE®

Can Zero-Waste Product Packaging Save Us From Our Plastic Addiction?

TerraCycle pepsico Nestle Unilever Include USA Danone Mondelez International UPS Procter & Gamble Loop Mars Petcare

To solve the ever-growing problem of too much waste and plastic, a coalition of major consumer product manufacturers is borrowing an old-fashioned idea.

Most Care2 readers probably won’t remember the days when the milkman came to call each morning. He used to bring milk and cream in glass bottles, which customers used and then put outside for him to retrieve. Today, that idea is getting a fresh coat of paint. Thanks to a new marketing platform called Loop, the producers of many of the items you buy will market their goods in reusable, returnable stainless steel containers. That’s called zero-waste packaging, my friends, and its time has come. “While recycling is critically important, it is not going to solve waste at the root cause,” Tom Szaky, CEO and cofounder of TerraCycle, one of the partners behind Loop, told Fast Company. “To us, the root cause of waste is not plastic, per se, it’s using things once, and that’s really what Loop tries to change as much as possible.” There’s a lot of truth in that statement. We buy so much stuff these days because it’s convenient and single-serve. Yes, it’s plastic — but it’s not plastic’s fault. Our love affair with convenience has landed us in the mess the world now faces. Here’s how the Loop platform will work:
  • Customers purchase products — anything from Dove deodorant to Haagen-Dazs ice cream — from Loop’s website
  • The purchase includes a deposit for the container
  • UPS, a Loop partner, will deliver the products to the customer’s home in a re-usable, compartmented tote
  • As the products are used up, customers place the empty containers back into the tote
  • When the tote becomes full, customers request a pickup via Loop’s website or drop off the tote at a UPS Store
Loop automatically replenishes the products a customer sends back, so the things you use all the time will come to you as you finish them. Loop calls it “the first subscription model that manages itself.” Each package is designed to be used at least 100 times. Use of that tote to move the products back and forth means there are no cardboard shipping boxes to get rid of — sorry, Amazon. Just consider the volume of garbage that will drop out of the waste stream if this model of packaging becomes the standard for the future. The array of brands participating in the Loop pilot program in New York City and Paris is remarkable. Here are only a few:
  • Crest
  • Seventh Generation
  • Tide
  • Clorox
  • Pantene
  • Nature’s Path Organic
  • Hidden Valley
  • Febreze
Procter & Gamble, Unilever, Nestlé, PepsiCo, Danone, Mars Petcare, Mondelēz International and others will provide their products in reusable containers for Loop’s pilot program. Assuming all goes well, we can expect to see Loop roll this idea out to a broader geographic area. With a little luck, maybe zero-waste packaging will be the future of commerce. Sometimes old ideas are the best ideas, after all. Like the old song says — everything old is new again.