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Haircare Brand Eva NYC Turns To Aluminum In An Effort To Kick Plastic Waste To The Curb

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As it deepens its commitment to the environment, Eva NYC is rolling out aluminum packaging for its full-size products.

Across its range, the haircare brand, which is dedicated to achieving B Corp certification by 2024, has become 100% recyclable. Its repackaged aluminum items are 93% plastic-free. Pumps are responsible for the 7% of the packaging that’s plastic, and they can be recycled via TerraCycle, a company specializing in hard-to-recycle materials Eva NYC partnered with last year as it kicked off its sustainable push. The brand has pledged to invest at least $3 million in its sustainability initiatives through 2025. Jane Moran, VP at Eva NYC, mentions the investment could put Eva NYC on a path to solidifying B Corp status within two years. “We are that focused,” she says. The beauty industry is a notorious offender to the environment, notes Moran, with an estimated over 120 billion units of beauty packaging produced annually on a global level. Most of the packaging is out of plastic that doesn’t get recycled.   image.png “Only 9% of plastics actually get recycled, and we want to provide our customers with an option to stop purchasing virgin plastics as they are the hardest to recycle,” says Moran. She shares survey data from WGSN reveals 88% of consumers want brands to assist them in being sustainable, but 43% feel brands make it harder for them. During the pandemic, interest in sustainability hasn’t ebbed. Eva NYC selected aluminum for several reasons. It can be recycled over and over again, and Moran points out aluminum is the easiest material to recycle in the United States because all curbside facilities accept it. Consumers give aluminum a thumb-up in Boston Consulting Group research cited by Eva NYC showing they believe it’s two times eco-friendlier and 1.4 times more recyclable than plastic. The brand isn’t the only one in the beauty industry to embrace aluminum. We Are Paradoxx’s haircare products are housed in aluminum, and Hand in Hand has encased liquid soaps in the material. For Eva NYC, the move to aluminum sparked a $1 price increase for shampoos and conditioners. Before the $1 increase, the brand hadn’t changed prices in six years. The aluminum cans hold a slightly greater amount of product than their plastic predecessors. “It balances out,” says Moran, adding, “Pricing is one of the biggest barriers. We really try to make our products affordable and accessible.” Eva NYC’s products are mostly priced from $10 to $15. The brand’s major retail partners include Target, Ulta Beauty, Sally Beauty and Costco. Target recently expanded Eva NYC from 400 to 1,300-plus doors. The brand added Amazon at the end of last year. Moran says Amazon is performing well, and emphasizes retailers have a swelling appetite for brands with sustainable positioning. While many stores were closed in 2020, Eva NYC concentrated on influencer and e-commerce efforts. “We put a focus on helping our retail partners as they shifted to more e-commerce. Even before the pandemic, we had started investing in our own site,” says Moran. Last year, Eva NYC’s sales grew by double digits over the year before. A WWD article in 2017 turned to industry sources to forecast the brand’s sales that year could be $45 million to $60 million. Along with haircare brand Amika, Eva NYC is in the portfolio of Heat Makes Sense, a privately-held company formed in 2007 in Brooklyn by co-CEOs Shay and Nir Kadosh, and creative director Vita Raykhman. Eva NYC has been certified cruelty-free by Leaping Bunny since its launch in 2012. Over the past year, the brand also became certified vegan. “We’ve removed any ingredients that might be harmful to the environment or body and, now, we’ve made this big step with our aluminum packaging,” says Moran. She joined Eva NYC two years ago after building extensive beauty industry experience in roles at past roles at Peter Thomas Roth, Elemis, L’Oréal and Unilever. At the brand, Moran says, “Our focus is to provide our consumers with a good hair day every day.” Mane Magic 10-In-1 Hair Primer is Eva NYC’s bestselling product. There’s a bevy of releases planned for 2021. This month, Satin Dream Shampoo + Conditioner ($13) and Satin Dream Leave-In Cream ($12) will bow. Next month, the assortment will extend to Just Glisten Hair + Body Shine Mist ($12). In the pipeline are products for brunettes, blondes and split-end repair. The brand continues to study options for pumps with the aim of reducing plastic.   image.png Eva NYC’s packaging has been upgraded to call out key attributes such as the aluminum it’s constructed from. To publicize the aluminum packaging rollout, Eva NYC teamed up with New York City graffiti artist and muralist Queen Andrea to conceptualize street art entitled “Recycling is Beautiful” located in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn. Moran strives for consumers to understand that one small change in their lives can make a big impact. “We also hope that new consumers come into the brand looking for a product that gives them fun and affordable haircare and be great for the environment,” she says. In addition to its aluminum packaging, Eva NYC is on course to save 400,000 kilowatt-hour of energy from the grid through solar and storage systems, and LED lights at its warehouse in Pennsauken, N.J. The publication Glossy detailed the brand is tapping $1.2 million in government incentives for the warehouse improvements and will save $50,000 on its electricity bill a year. The publication divulged the “gross cost of the solar panels is $683,340 and the gross cost of the solar energy battery is $248,750.” Moran says, “We won’t stop finding ways to make our brand more sustainable.”
“We won’t stop finding ways to make our brand more sustainable.”

Eva NYC is Partnering with TerraCycle to Reuse its Bottles

Eva NYC, a Brooklyn-based cruelty free haircare label that offers clean products that are made with powerful ingredients to support healthy hair, has announced that it is partnering with TerraCycle to make its packaging more sustainable. Through the partnership, Eva NYC will enable its consumers to recycle the aluminum bottles after they've used the product inside. Brand Vice President Jane Morgan spoke to Eva NYC's partnership with TerraCycle, stating “Our goal is to create hair products that are just as down to earth as we are, which is why we’re cruelty-free, completely free from parabens and phthalates, and now 100% recyclable through TerraCycle. This will ensure our customers can trust they'll always be making the right choice for their hair, and can now feel confident it's the right choice for the environment too."

Is Eva NYC Cruelty-Free & 100% Vegan in 2020? (What You Need To Know!)

Eva NYC has confirmed they do not test their products or ingredients on animals, they do not allow others to test on their behalf, their suppliers also do not test on animals, they do not allow their products to be tested on animals when required by law, and their products are not sold in stores in mainland China or any other country that may require animal testing. Below is a snippet of the email response I received from Eva NYC: “All of our products are also Leaping Bunny certified, which means that at no point in production are our ingredients or products tested on animals. We do not sell outside of North America at this time.

Eva NYC Partners with TerraCycle

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Eva NYC has partnered with TerraCycle to make the packaging for their line of hair care products nationally recyclable in the United States. As an added incentive, for every shipment of Eva NYC waste sent to TerraCycle, collectors earn points that can be donated to a non-profit, school or charitable organization of their choice. “We're on a mission to give everyone a good hair day, every day, by providing our consumers with haircare that’s fun, effective and affordable. Our goal is to create hair products that are just as down to earth as we are, which is why we’re cruelty-free, completely free from parabens and phthalates, and now 100% recyclable through TerraCycle. This will ensure our customers can trust they'll always be making the right choice for their hair, and can now feel confident it's the right choice for the environment too” said Jane Moran, Eva NYC vice brand president. Through the Eva NYC Recycling Program, consumers can now send in Eva NYC hair care packaging including tubes, bottles, trigger heads, complex closures and tinted glass to be recycled for free. To participate, sign up on the TerraCycle program page and mail in the packaging waste using a prepaid shipping label. Once collected, the packaging is cleaned and melted into hard plastic that can be remolded to make new recycled products. “TerraCycle’s mission has always been to ‘Eliminate the Idea of Waste’ and, in turn, be kind to the planet,” said Tom Szaky, TerraCycle founder and CEO. “By participating in the Eva NYC Recycling Program, consumers have a unique opportunity to demonstrate their respect for the environment by diverting their packaging waste from landfills, as well as through the products that they choose to include in their hair care routines.” The Eva NYC Recycling Program is open to any interested individual, school, office, or community organization.

Eva NYC hair care outlines 4-year sustainability plan

image.png Sustainability has become a driving force for brands to keep up with consumer values this year, and many have pushed themselves to make massive strides in a short amount of time. On Friday, mass hair care brand Eva NYC launched a partnership with TerraCycle, with a website relaunch Thursday designed to promote the brand’s ongoing sustainability initiatives. Those plans include moving to 100% recyclable packaging and green energy in the brand’s two New Jersey warehouses by 2021, then switching to a mix of post-consumer recycled plastic and non-plastics in 2022, and achieving B-Corp certification by 2024, among other goals. Overall, Eva NYC has invested $2.9 million in sustainability to date, starting in 2018, with another $2 million planned in the next two years as part of its goal to receive B-Corp certification.
“We want people to know that we are credible in this space and that it’s not something we are doing as a greenwashing movement,” said Jane Moran, Eva NYC brand vp. “Our customers, who are both young and older millennials, are looking for the same traits in beauty products: [they need to be] fun, affordable and effective. But, now there’s a lifestyle change where people want clean and sustainable beauty, as well.”
The 8-year-old brand sells through retailers including Target, Ulta and Sally Beauty. It experienced  22% year-over-year total sales growth in 2020, according to Moran. She declined to state overall revenue, but a 2017 WWD article speculated the brand would earn between $45 million and $60 million that year. Prices for its hair care products range from $9 to $15. Gina Herrera, TerraCycle senior director of brand partnerships, said Eva NYC is covering all of the costs for recycling, which is traditionally how its partnerships operate. Through a link on Eva NYC’s website, customers request postage from TerraCycle in order to send their products to the recycling company, which Eva NYC covers, along with the costs associated with breaking down the plastic into a reusable material. Both Eva NYC and Terracycle declined to comment on exact investment costs, citing they can fluctuate month to month based on return volume. Eva NYC does expect its investment to increase every year. Moran said Eva NYC is still figuring out how it wants to use the post-consumer recycled materials, based on volume. Some solutions include making it into reusable bags for products or park benches. Herrera said there are a few main reasons brands partner with TerraCycle. The primary motivating factor is reducing waste, followed by backing more meaningful marketing and customer engagement. TerraCycle has become a de facto first step for brands looking to become sustainable. In 2020, its notable new beauty partners included Boscia, C’est Moi and Living Proof. “It allows brands to lean into authenticity,” she said. “Brands can use TerraCycle as a tool of engagement with consumers to discuss their sustainability platform or stance, or in a social media space to engage customers through a collection contest or in an [e-commerce] loyalty program.” The new website that launches Thursday features a landing page about the TerraCycle partnership and the “four easy steps” for how to recycle products. It includes a link out to TerraCycle.com. Eva NYC has also emailed customers over the last three months to ask them to save their empty containers in preparation for the TerraCycle partnership. As Eva NYC presses forward with its 2021 plans, it is looking to add TerraCycle recycling information to all packaging starting with QR codes, Moran said. “We need to be as clear as possible and as concise as possible by using language that the consumer really understands,” said Moran. The next step for Eva NYC is adding solar-powered energy and storage systems to its Pennsauken, New Jersey warehouse. It will use $1.2 million in government incentives to build and is anticipated to save the brand $50,000 on its electricity bill in the first year, according to Moran. The gross cost of the solar panels is $683,340 and the gross cost of the solar energy battery is $248,750.

eva nyc’s partnership with terracycle: reduce, reuse & restyle

Caring for hair can be hard, but having a good hair day, every day, doesn’t have to be. We’re on a mission to deliver results & be kind to the planet with products that are cruelty-free, free from parabens and phthalates, and come in sustainable packaging that can be recycled. That’s why we’ve officially launched our partnership with TerraCycle, an international leader in recycling to make it easy to reduce, reuse, and restyle with the Eva NYC hair products you already love.