![](https://mail.google.com/mail/u/2?ui=2&ik=206ff8df6c&attid=0.1&permmsgid=msg-f:1659165679869835963&th=17068a652c293abb&view=fimg&sz=s0-l75-ft&attbid=ANGjdJ-9E4rnfLDvqS9q8xc5kHSdHmI6zQ8jWs-puR28FuGc8AsRZymH2NgBlx-GWzsj0RroNjpApgafsDgYZXDbWLC8bqJYHzDswnPLj2cviipGO-UU_RrFXylXifY&disp=emb&realattid=4dd6cf2af419a743_0.1)
JACKSON, Wyo. (AP) — A program to recycle energy bar wrappers is ending in a Wyoming town known for outdoor sports and elsewhere.
After four years, a recycling center in Jackson will stop taking Clif Bar wrappers.
Clif Bar offered the recycling since 2008 through a partnership with TerraCycle, a company specializing in hard-to-recycle materials.
The company collected the wrappers to be melted down into hard plastic. It donated a penny per wrapper to the American Releaf Program, which plants trees in areas affected by wildfires, mining, development and other disruption.
The program raised about $500,000 from wrappers collected at 14,500 locations, according to its website.
The program required recycling workers in Jackson to sort through and throw out everything that wasn't a foil-lined energy bar wrapper, the Jackson Hole News & Guide reports.
The center needed to collect 50 pounds (23 kilograms) of wrappers before shipping them.
Clif Bar pledges on its website to create packaging that’s 100% “reusable, recyclable, or compostable” by 2025. The company did not respond to News & Guide requests for comment.
![](https://mail.google.com/mail/u/2?ui=2&ik=206ff8df6c&attid=0.1&permmsgid=msg-f:1659165679869835963&th=17068a652c293abb&view=fimg&sz=s0-l75-ft&attbid=ANGjdJ-9E4rnfLDvqS9q8xc5kHSdHmI6zQ8jWs-puR28FuGc8AsRZymH2NgBlx-GWzsj0RroNjpApgafsDgYZXDbWLC8bqJYHzDswnPLj2cviipGO-UU_RrFXylXifY&disp=emb&realattid=4dd6cf2af419a743_0.1)
JACKSON, Wyo. (AP) — A program to recycle energy bar wrappers is ending in a Wyoming town known for outdoor sports and elsewhere.
After four years, a recycling center in Jackson will stop taking Clif Bar wrappers.
Clif Bar offered the recycling since 2008 through a partnership with TerraCycle, a company specializing in hard-to-recycle materials.
The company collected the wrappers to be melted down into hard plastic. It donated a penny per wrapper to the American Releaf Program, which plants trees in areas affected by wildfires, mining, development and other disruption.
The program raised about $500,000 from wrappers collected at 14,500 locations, according to its website.
The program required recycling workers in Jackson to sort through and throw out everything that wasn't a foil-lined energy bar wrapper, the Jackson Hole News & Guide reports.
The center needed to collect 50 pounds (23 kilograms) of wrappers before shipping them.
Clif Bar pledges on its website to create packaging that’s 100% “reusable, recyclable, or compostable” by 2025. The company did not respond to News & Guide requests for comment.
![](https://mail.google.com/mail/u/2?ui=2&ik=206ff8df6c&attid=0.1&permmsgid=msg-f:1659165679869835963&th=17068a652c293abb&view=fimg&sz=s0-l75-ft&attbid=ANGjdJ-9E4rnfLDvqS9q8xc5kHSdHmI6zQ8jWs-puR28FuGc8AsRZymH2NgBlx-GWzsj0RroNjpApgafsDgYZXDbWLC8bqJYHzDswnPLj2cviipGO-UU_RrFXylXifY&disp=emb&realattid=4dd6cf2af419a743_0.1)
JACKSON, Wyo. (AP) — A program to recycle energy bar wrappers is ending in a Wyoming town known for outdoor sports and elsewhere.
After four years, a recycling center in Jackson will stop taking Clif Bar wrappers.
Clif Bar offered the recycling since 2008 through a partnership with TerraCycle, a company specializing in hard-to-recycle materials.
The company collected the wrappers to be melted down into hard plastic. It donated a penny per wrapper to the American Releaf Program, which plants trees in areas affected by wildfires, mining, development and other disruption.
The program raised about $500,000 from wrappers collected at 14,500 locations, according to its website.
The program required recycling workers in Jackson to sort through and throw out everything that wasn't a foil-lined energy bar wrapper, the Jackson Hole News & Guide reports.
The center needed to collect 50 pounds (23 kilograms) of wrappers before shipping them.
Clif Bar pledges on its website to create packaging that’s 100% “reusable, recyclable, or compostable” by 2025. The company did not respond to News & Guide requests for comment.
![](https://mail.google.com/mail/u/2?ui=2&ik=206ff8df6c&attid=0.1&permmsgid=msg-f:1659165679869835963&th=17068a652c293abb&view=fimg&sz=s0-l75-ft&attbid=ANGjdJ-9E4rnfLDvqS9q8xc5kHSdHmI6zQ8jWs-puR28FuGc8AsRZymH2NgBlx-GWzsj0RroNjpApgafsDgYZXDbWLC8bqJYHzDswnPLj2cviipGO-UU_RrFXylXifY&disp=emb&realattid=4dd6cf2af419a743_0.1)
JACKSON, Wyo. (AP) — A program to recycle energy bar wrappers is ending in a Wyoming town known for outdoor sports and elsewhere.
After four years, a recycling center in Jackson will stop taking Clif Bar wrappers.
Clif Bar offered the recycling since 2008 through a partnership with TerraCycle, a company specializing in hard-to-recycle materials.
The company collected the wrappers to be melted down into hard plastic. It donated a penny per wrapper to the American Releaf Program, which plants trees in areas affected by wildfires, mining, development and other disruption.
The program raised about $500,000 from wrappers collected at 14,500 locations, according to its website.
The program required recycling workers in Jackson to sort through and throw out everything that wasn't a foil-lined energy bar wrapper, the Jackson Hole News & Guide reports.
The center needed to collect 50 pounds (23 kilograms) of wrappers before shipping them.
Clif Bar pledges on its website to create packaging that’s 100% “reusable, recyclable, or compostable” by 2025. The company did not respond to News & Guide requests for comment.
![](https://mail.google.com/mail/u/2?ui=2&ik=206ff8df6c&attid=0.1&permmsgid=msg-f:1659165679869835963&th=17068a652c293abb&view=fimg&sz=s0-l75-ft&attbid=ANGjdJ-9E4rnfLDvqS9q8xc5kHSdHmI6zQ8jWs-puR28FuGc8AsRZymH2NgBlx-GWzsj0RroNjpApgafsDgYZXDbWLC8bqJYHzDswnPLj2cviipGO-UU_RrFXylXifY&disp=emb&realattid=4dd6cf2af419a743_0.1)
JACKSON, Wyo. (AP) — A program to recycle energy bar wrappers is ending in a Wyoming town known for outdoor sports and elsewhere.
After four years, a recycling center in Jackson will stop taking Clif Bar wrappers.
Clif Bar offered the recycling since 2008 through a partnership with TerraCycle, a company specializing in hard-to-recycle materials.
The company collected the wrappers to be melted down into hard plastic. It donated a penny per wrapper to the American Releaf Program, which plants trees in areas affected by wildfires, mining, development and other disruption.
The program raised about $500,000 from wrappers collected at 14,500 locations, according to its website.
The program required recycling workers in Jackson to sort through and throw out everything that wasn't a foil-lined energy bar wrapper, the Jackson Hole News & Guide reports.
The center needed to collect 50 pounds (23 kilograms) of wrappers before shipping them.
Clif Bar pledges on its website to create packaging that’s 100% “reusable, recyclable, or compostable” by 2025. The company did not respond to News & Guide requests for comment.
![](https://mail.google.com/mail/u/2?ui=2&ik=206ff8df6c&attid=0.1&permmsgid=msg-f:1659165679869835963&th=17068a652c293abb&view=fimg&sz=s0-l75-ft&attbid=ANGjdJ-9E4rnfLDvqS9q8xc5kHSdHmI6zQ8jWs-puR28FuGc8AsRZymH2NgBlx-GWzsj0RroNjpApgafsDgYZXDbWLC8bqJYHzDswnPLj2cviipGO-UU_RrFXylXifY&disp=emb&realattid=4dd6cf2af419a743_0.1)
JACKSON, Wyo. (AP) — A program to recycle energy bar wrappers is ending in a Wyoming town known for outdoor sports and elsewhere.
After four years, a recycling center in Jackson will stop taking Clif Bar wrappers.
Clif Bar offered the recycling since 2008 through a partnership with TerraCycle, a company specializing in hard-to-recycle materials.
The company collected the wrappers to be melted down into hard plastic. It donated a penny per wrapper to the American Releaf Program, which plants trees in areas affected by wildfires, mining, development and other disruption.
The program raised about $500,000 from wrappers collected at 14,500 locations, according to its website.
The program required recycling workers in Jackson to sort through and throw out everything that wasn't a foil-lined energy bar wrapper, the Jackson Hole News & Guide reports.
The center needed to collect 50 pounds (23 kilograms) of wrappers before shipping them.
Clif Bar pledges on its website to create packaging that’s 100% “reusable, recyclable, or compostable” by 2025. The company did not respond to News & Guide requests for comment.
![](https://mail.google.com/mail/u/2?ui=2&ik=206ff8df6c&attid=0.1&permmsgid=msg-f:1659165679869835963&th=17068a652c293abb&view=fimg&sz=s0-l75-ft&attbid=ANGjdJ-9E4rnfLDvqS9q8xc5kHSdHmI6zQ8jWs-puR28FuGc8AsRZymH2NgBlx-GWzsj0RroNjpApgafsDgYZXDbWLC8bqJYHzDswnPLj2cviipGO-UU_RrFXylXifY&disp=emb&realattid=4dd6cf2af419a743_0.1)
JACKSON, Wyo. (AP) — A program to recycle energy bar wrappers is ending in a Wyoming town known for outdoor sports and elsewhere.
After four years, a recycling center in Jackson will stop taking Clif Bar wrappers.
Clif Bar offered the recycling since 2008 through a partnership with TerraCycle, a company specializing in hard-to-recycle materials.
The company collected the wrappers to be melted down into hard plastic. It donated a penny per wrapper to the American Releaf Program, which plants trees in areas affected by wildfires, mining, development and other disruption.
The program raised about $500,000 from wrappers collected at 14,500 locations, according to its website.
The program required recycling workers in Jackson to sort through and throw out everything that wasn't a foil-lined energy bar wrapper, the Jackson Hole News & Guide reports.
The center needed to collect 50 pounds (23 kilograms) of wrappers before shipping them.
Clif Bar pledges on its website to create packaging that’s 100% “reusable, recyclable, or compostable” by 2025. The company did not respond to News & Guide requests for comment.
![](https://mail.google.com/mail/u/2?ui=2&ik=206ff8df6c&attid=0.1&permmsgid=msg-f:1659165679869835963&th=17068a652c293abb&view=fimg&sz=s0-l75-ft&attbid=ANGjdJ-9E4rnfLDvqS9q8xc5kHSdHmI6zQ8jWs-puR28FuGc8AsRZymH2NgBlx-GWzsj0RroNjpApgafsDgYZXDbWLC8bqJYHzDswnPLj2cviipGO-UU_RrFXylXifY&disp=emb&realattid=4dd6cf2af419a743_0.1)
JACKSON, Wyo. (AP) — A program to recycle energy bar wrappers is ending in a Wyoming town known for outdoor sports and elsewhere.
After four years, a recycling center in Jackson will stop taking Clif Bar wrappers.
Clif Bar offered the recycling since 2008 through a partnership with TerraCycle, a company specializing in hard-to-recycle materials.
The company collected the wrappers to be melted down into hard plastic. It donated a penny per wrapper to the American Releaf Program, which plants trees in areas affected by wildfires, mining, development and other disruption.
The program raised about $500,000 from wrappers collected at 14,500 locations, according to its website.
The program required recycling workers in Jackson to sort through and throw out everything that wasn't a foil-lined energy bar wrapper, the Jackson Hole News & Guide reports.
The center needed to collect 50 pounds (23 kilograms) of wrappers before shipping them.
Clif Bar pledges on its website to create packaging that’s 100% “reusable, recyclable, or compostable” by 2025. The company did not respond to News & Guide requests for comment.
![](https://mail.google.com/mail/u/2?ui=2&ik=206ff8df6c&attid=0.1&permmsgid=msg-f:1659165679869835963&th=17068a652c293abb&view=fimg&sz=s0-l75-ft&attbid=ANGjdJ-9E4rnfLDvqS9q8xc5kHSdHmI6zQ8jWs-puR28FuGc8AsRZymH2NgBlx-GWzsj0RroNjpApgafsDgYZXDbWLC8bqJYHzDswnPLj2cviipGO-UU_RrFXylXifY&disp=emb&realattid=4dd6cf2af419a743_0.1)
JACKSON, Wyo. (AP) — A program to recycle energy bar wrappers is ending in a Wyoming town known for outdoor sports and elsewhere.
After four years, a recycling center in Jackson will stop taking Clif Bar wrappers.
Clif Bar offered the recycling since 2008 through a partnership with TerraCycle, a company specializing in hard-to-recycle materials.
The company collected the wrappers to be melted down into hard plastic. It donated a penny per wrapper to the American Releaf Program, which plants trees in areas affected by wildfires, mining, development and other disruption.
The program raised about $500,000 from wrappers collected at 14,500 locations, according to its website.
The program required recycling workers in Jackson to sort through and throw out everything that wasn't a foil-lined energy bar wrapper, the Jackson Hole News & Guide reports.
The center needed to collect 50 pounds (23 kilograms) of wrappers before shipping them.
Clif Bar pledges on its website to create packaging that’s 100% “reusable, recyclable, or compostable” by 2025. The company did not respond to News & Guide requests for comment.
![](https://mail.google.com/mail/u/2?ui=2&ik=206ff8df6c&attid=0.1&permmsgid=msg-f:1659165679869835963&th=17068a652c293abb&view=fimg&sz=s0-l75-ft&attbid=ANGjdJ-9E4rnfLDvqS9q8xc5kHSdHmI6zQ8jWs-puR28FuGc8AsRZymH2NgBlx-GWzsj0RroNjpApgafsDgYZXDbWLC8bqJYHzDswnPLj2cviipGO-UU_RrFXylXifY&disp=emb&realattid=4dd6cf2af419a743_0.1)
JACKSON, Wyo. (AP) — A program to recycle energy bar wrappers is ending in a Wyoming town known for outdoor sports and elsewhere.
After four years, a recycling center in Jackson will stop taking Clif Bar wrappers.
Clif Bar offered the recycling since 2008 through a partnership with TerraCycle, a company specializing in hard-to-recycle materials.
The company collected the wrappers to be melted down into hard plastic. It donated a penny per wrapper to the American Releaf Program, which plants trees in areas affected by wildfires, mining, development and other disruption.
The program raised about $500,000 from wrappers collected at 14,500 locations, according to its website.
The program required recycling workers in Jackson to sort through and throw out everything that wasn't a foil-lined energy bar wrapper, the Jackson Hole News & Guide reports.
The center needed to collect 50 pounds (23 kilograms) of wrappers before shipping them.
Clif Bar pledges on its website to create packaging that’s 100% “reusable, recyclable, or compostable” by 2025. The company did not respond to News & Guide requests for comment.