Tom Szaky was just a Princeton freshman when he discovered a treasure in an unlikely place: behind the university dining hall. The short version of the story is that Szaky discovered that the organic waste produced in the dining hall could be naturally composted by worms and turned into fertilizer. When Szaky started packaging this fertilizer in used soda bottles, he began producing the first product made entirely from waste.
As a result of this discovery, Szaky began a school program that teaches younger generations to change their habits and rethink the way they view waste. Instead of immediately throwing something aside – they should think, “What can I do with this? Can I make something out of this?” Forget about having reusable items sit in a landfill; you can get creative and sew juice pouches together to make a pencil case or iron shopping bags to make a tote.
Here is some information that might interest hikers who prescribe to the
Leave No Trace philosophy of
hiking. The below information is about a business that will
recycling many of the non-recyclables that hikers regularly throw out. Anyone can send in their used wrappers for free and for every piece of packaging that TerraCycle receives, participants are awarded with two points, which can be put toward buying a specific charity gift, or converted to money and donated to a charity of the participant’s choice. Here is a press release that was sent out by the people at TerraCycle. We thought it was a cool concept.
TRENTON, New Jersey – June 21, 2011 – This summer, instead of throwing out their garbage, hikers and park-goers have another option for their non-recyclable trash after they pack it out: sending it free of charge to pioneering company TerraCycle® to be recycled. TerraCycle collects people’s trash and recycles the non-recyclable into eco-friendly, affordable, and practical products.
The “leave no trace” policy, which has evolved into the “pack it in, pack it out” policy of taking all your trash out of
the park with you, is furthered by TerraCycle’s Brigade® program, through which people can send in difficult-to-recycle food wrappers for recycling and upcycling and earn cash for charity. Usually, wrappers from products including Kashi, Bear Naked, CLIF BAR, and Revolution Foods, among others, are non-recyclable.
TerraCycle upcycles some wrappers into tote bags, coolers, notebooks, laptop cases and mini-speakers. Wrappers that aren’t upcycled are melted down and turned into plastics such as trash cans, flower pots, and clipboards. The snacks that hikers use while enjoying the outdoors can become eco-friendly, long-life products that support the environment that hikers are enjoying. Instead of just leaving no trace on the parks, hikers and outdoorsmen can also leave no trace on the Earth.
Anyone can sign up for TerraCycle’s Brigade programs and send in their wrappers for free. For every wrapper TerraCycle receives, two points are awarded that can be put toward buying a specific charity gift, or converted to money and donated to a charity of the participant’s choice. Most importantly, the Brigade will be keeping these wrappers out of the local landfills and off the ground.
TerraCycle
Jun 10th, 2011 by Sarah
Awhile back I received a press release from TerraCycle about reducing the burden of energy bar wrappers:
Recycling the Non-Recyclable: TerraCycle Works to "Leave No Trace" on the Earth
TRENTON, New Jersey - May 18, 2011 - This summer, instead of throwing out their
garbage, hikers and park-goers have another option for their non-recyclable trash
after they pack it out: sending it free of charge to pioneering company
TerraCycle(r) to be recycled. TerraCycle collects people's trash and recycles the
non-recyclable into eco-friendly, affordable, and practical products.
The "leave no trace" policy, which has evolved into the "pack it in, pack it out"
policy of taking all your trash out of the park with you, is furthered by
TerraCycle's Brigade(r) program, through which people can send in
difficult-to-recycle food wrappers for recycling and upcycling and earn cash for
charity. Usually, wrappers from products including Kashi, Bear Naked, CLIF BAR, and
Revolution Foods, among others, are non-recyclable.
TerraCycle upcycles some wrappers into tote bags, coolers, notebooks, laptop cases
and mini-speakers. Wrappers that aren't upcycled are melted down and turned into
plastics such as trash cans, flower pots, and clipboards. The snacks that hikers use
while enjoying the outdoors can become eco-friendly, long-life products that support
the environment that hikers are enjoying. Instead of just leaving no trace on the
parks, hikers and outdoorsmen can also leave no trace on the Earth.
Anyone can sign up for TerraCycle's Brigade programs and send in their wrappers for
free. For every wrapper TerraCycle receives, two points are awarded that can be put
toward buying a specific charity gift, or converted to money and donated to a
charity of the participant's choice. Most importantly, the Brigade will be keeping
these wrappers out of the local landfills and off the ground.
So far, TerraCycle has kept over two billion pieces of trash from leaving their mark
on the Earth, and with its partners, dispersed over $2 million to charity through
the Brigade program.
For more information on how to sign up, send in trash and earn extra cash for your
favorite school or charity, visit
www.terracycle.net
~Sarah
There’s an old Yorkshire expression that says, “Where there’s muck, there’s brass.” Translated into 21st-century American, it means there’s money in garbage. Read how a young Canadian immigrant is making millions from “muck” and saving the environment at the same time.
And as previously articulated, TerraCycle partners with brands to re/upcycle hard-to-recycle branded packaging, like Cliff Bar wrappers, Capri-Sun juice pouches, and so on. By setting up collection sites across America and the world—called brigades—TerraCycle is able to collect the quantity necessary to economically justify the reprocessing of it. While everything technically is recyclable, the costs of collection (curb side vs. drop off vs. deposits) and sortation (single stream vs. comingled vs. manual/automated sorting technologies) for multi-material packaging usually exceeds the cost of virgin material/packaging production; this results in the likelihood that said packaging is not being recycled in most American communities. When brands partner with TerraCycle, however, they fund the shipment of the hard-to-recycle post consumer collected packaging to a TerraCycle facility, where it stays until it is re/upcycled into new products/packaging/material. Part of the fee for partnering with TerraCycle also goes into R&D to better understand how to get the most value out of the collected “waste” and PR, so that the partnered brands receive the marketing collateral inherent in such a warm and fuzzy initiative.
We can't stop working to turn the Earth's health around. We have to continue recycling, reducing and reusing. We have to find new ways every day to minimize our carbon footprint. There are opportunities everywhere. Take, for example, the Clif Bar you're currently munching. TerraCycle [1] is now offering 2 cents for every Clif Bar wrapper you collect (you have to sign up first), so that they can turn them into funky eco-cessories, reducing the amount of wrappers that end up in landfills each year. And
they aren't stopping at Clif Bars; Nature Valley and PowerBar wrappers are accepted as well. If you don't eat energy bars but gobble up tubs of yogurt and gallons of juice, TerraCycle is collecting yogurt containers and drinkpouches. Sounds good, and easy, to me.
I have never hidden my love for all things Clif, and I doubt that I am alone.
But, what to do with all of those wrappers? You want to be environmentally friendly (we're cyclists, after all) and keep additional waste out of our landfills.
Clif Bar has teamed up with TerraCycle to collect used energy bar wrappers - keeping them out of landfills. These wrappers will then be made to eco-friendly products. Also, $.02 from every wrapper will be donated to a nonprofit of your choice.
The process is simple. You sign up with TerraCycle, collect the wrappers and send them in (free shipping!), where they are upcycled into products from bags to park benches
Teacher Heidi Hanner who is leading the “Garden” effort explains how Field Park students learn to conserve, “We just started the TerraCycle program,” she said. “We collect and send in items that would otherwise be trash (used Ziploc bags, juice pouches, chip bags, Clif Bar wrappers) and they are made into something else.”
They are constantly working to minimize their waste stream. These efforts inspired a partnership with TerraCycle in order to “upcycle” Clif Bar wrappers (with the exception of CLIF Kid Organic Twisted Fruit® and CLIF SHOT® foods). TerraCycle sponsors their Wrapper Brigade to incentivize wrapper recycling. So far they have recycled over 10 million wrappers and goods made from the recycled wrappers have helped raise over $30,000 for non-profit organizations. In addition, all Clif Bar caddies are 100 percent shrink wrap free and made with 100 percent recycled (65 percent post-consumer) paperboard.
Er bringt mit seiner Firma Terracycle den Amerikanern das Wiederverwerten bei. Tom Szaky wird bereits mit dem Facebook-Gründer verglichen. Jetzt will er auch den deutschen Markt aufrollen. Dort trifft TerraCycle allerdings auf ein bereits etabliertes Recycling-System; eine Herausforderung, die Szaky bereit ist, anzunehmen.