TERRACYCLE NEWS

ELIMINATING THE IDEA OF WASTE®

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Spring Toys from Zuru

Are you running out of things to keep your kids occupied during this time of social distancing? If so, Zuru has so many new things for your kids to play with! Rainbocorns Sparkle Heart Surprise Rainbocorns Sparkle Heart Surprise   Rainbocorns Sparkle Heart Surprise includes a Rainbocorn collectible with a unique gem heart! Pop the gem in your Rainbocorn or onto your bling ring, and swap your rainbocorn’s hearts and wings to create your own cute surprise! Find other surprises including boo-boocorns, rainbocorn poop and much more in every pack! ?Ages 3+, two-pack SRP $4.99; four-pack SRP $9.99. Available at Amazon, Walmart and Target.   5 Surprise Mini Brands 5 Surprise Mini Brands 5 Surprise Mini Brands are real shopping brands that fit in your hands! Unwrap, peel, and reveal REAL miniature collectibles with 5 Surprise Mini Brands! Each capsule is a surprise unboxing with dozens of miniatures and surprise shopping accessories to find. What 5 surprises will you unbox? There are over 70 miniatures of your favorite brands to collect, including rare Metallic and Glow in the Dark minis, and Super Rare Golden Minis too! Collect them all to create your own mini shopping world! Ages 5+, SRP $5.99. Available at Amazon, Target and Walmart.   Crazy Bunch O Balloons Water Bunch O Balloons
The original and best-selling water balloons let’s one fill and tie 100 balloons in 60 seconds now come with a spark of color! Each Bunch O Balloons stem will come with a completely new mix of multi-colored balloons. PS, In addition, all ZURU Bunch O Balloons TM products in the USA are fully recyclable through ZURU’s TerraCycle Recycling program. ?Ages 3+; SRP $6.99   X-Shot Micro Fast-Fill and X-Shot Epic Fast-Fill micro fast fill water gun
Up your game with ZURU’s X-Shot dart and water blasters, the world’s number two brand in the category and winner of multiple toy awards including a finalist for this year’s Toy of the Year Outdoor Toy. The 2020 Spring line expands ZURU’s innovative Fast-Fill approach and Technology and ?brings new colors and real-to-life-size blaster fun to both the Micro Fast-Fill and Epic Fast-Fill. Micro Fast Fill   At nearly six-inches long, the newly-sized MICRO revolver-style water blaster can be refilled with one hand in just one second! Simply pull the hammer down, dunk, fill and blast. It is the perfect back-up blaster in water fights anywhere. ?Ages 3+, SRP $10.99 Epic Fast Fill epic fast fill water gun At nearly 21-inches long, the newly sized Epic Fast-Fill is the must-have water blaster for any kind of water fight, anywhere. Holding up to 1250 ml – more than 5 cups of water! – the Epic also fills in one-second and comes with a robust pump-action feature that enables kids to blast up to nearly 34 feet. In addition, four different nozzles allow one to blast four different ways. Ages 3+, SRP $19.99   5 Surprise Dino Strike Surprise Dino Strike
Unbox, build, and battle all new 5 Surprise Dino Strike! Assemble your battling dinos and get them ready to face off against their fierce enemies. Each dino comes with armor and headgear, customizable weapon backpacks and weapons that you can fire and swap for the ultimate combat combo. Collect all 13 battling dinos like the roaring T-Rex, charging triceratops and the fearsome velociraptors. Can you find and go into battle with the molten gold T-Rex fossil dino? Swap your weapons across each weapon backpack and even combine single and double blasters to make the ultimate triple blaster prehistoric predator ready for warfare!  
  • Every Capsule Includes a battling dino ready to be assembled, 1 customizable weapon backpack and 1 or 2 swappable weapons to battle with.
  • Unbox, Build and Battle all new 5 Surprise Dino Strike with customizable weaponry and armor.
  • Build the ultimate battling dino equipped with headgear, armor, scalable weapon backpack and firing weapons.
  • Swap weapons across different dino teams to create the ultimate combat crew
  • Collect them all and combine single and double blasters together to make the ultimate triple blaster.
  • Collect all 13 of the Dino Strike army including the rare molten gold T-Rex fossil.
  My take: My kids had a lot of fun with all of these toys! We were all very impressed with how tiny and detailed the 5 surprise mini brands were!   My daughter LOVED the Rainbocorns Sparkle Heart Surprises   My middle son got a kick out of assembling the dinosaur:   We even had one very warm day where the Crazy Bunch O Balloons Water and water guns were used which made for very happy kids!!

Leading by Example

With that, companies can no longer brush off sustainability's importance. Yet, several global companies have already led the charge with creative (and cool) initiatives. Let's take a look at some of the most notable examples. 08 02 lead by example coke The Coca-Cola Co.: Sustainability? No Sweat That world-renowned red bottle has dedicated part of its sustainability efforts to branded fashion. The Coke Store sells hoodies that are made of 50 percent cotton and 50 percent recycled plastic bottles. They promise superior softness. 08 02 lead by example unilever Unilever: Turning the Tide Unilever is committed to the plastics problem, particularly in the big blue seas, and is working with TerraCycle, a recycling company, to make product bottles that are comprised of 80 percent recycled plastic and 20 percent reclaimed ocean plastics. 08 02 lead by example pepsico PepsiCo: Let it Shine! Big companies have big power needs. PepsiCo announced a power pledge to be 100 percent renewable energy with wind and solar technologies throughout their global operations—at plants and offices. With their high energy needs to produce snacks and water, they are shining the light on their efficiencies. 08 02 lead by example boxed water Boxed Water: Forget the Plastic Ditch the plastic water for Boxed Water, and take the no-plastic pledge. That’s what Boxed Water is trying to do. The company’s 100 percent recyclable “boxes” of water, the company says, is more efficient to produce and distribute. Instead of reusing, they want to divert the potential 8.8 million metric tons of plastic that get tossed in the ocean. 08 02 lead by example patagonia Patagonia: Whatever They Could Find! The outdoor-clothing company offers a fleece made of 100 percent recycled polyester materials: reclaimed soda bottles, recycled waste and other recycled clothes. They also use ocean plastics for rain jackets and have since the 1990s. They’ll make clothes out of anything these days! 08 02 lead by example bagel Into the Deep Original Bagel Company’s Dave Harris took his family to Cancun for the holidays. When he decided to snorkel a reef he had SCUBA dove decades ago, he thought it’d be a stellar experience for the clan. What he didn’t expect was the snorkeling guide’s “lecture” to the group about the depleted reef life, a sad reality. “Seeing them then (30 years ago), and seeing them now? It is pretty staggering. And depressing,” Harris says. Harris took to the real-life impact of a personal experience, leaving him with motivation and inspiration for his company’s sustainability efforts.

Dairy Alternative Company Follow Your Heart Ramps up Sustainability Efforts

Vegan brand Follow Your Heart has been ahead of the curve when it comes to implementing sustainability measures, and the 49-year-old dairy alternative company is taking new measures to boost them even more. Earth Island, the facility where FYH currently produces its vegan products in, has an entire department dedicated to advancing sustainability measures.  

A Leader in the Plant-Based Industry

  A zero-waste commitment has lead FYH to become the first-ever plant-based brand to achieve the Platinum Level Zero Waste Certification by Green Business Certification Incorporated. For the past four years, the company has diverted over 98% of its waste from landfills through recycling, composting, reduction, or reusing. FYH has also recycled a total of 270 tons of material and has a garden on the grounds of their solar-powered office which yields yearly over 1,000 pounds of fresh produce for employees to enjoy. To add to this extensive green effort, FYH is now taking recycling efforts one step further by partnering with TerraCycle, a global leader that specializes in recycling materials that are traditionally difficult to recycle. TerraCycle is helping FYH to reduce employee waste by adding three new recycling boxes to all of their offices and warehouses. These new boxes are for hard-to-recycle items including office supplies, plastic packaging and food wrappers. The bins will collect this waste to repurpose it into functional items like shipping pallets, recycling bins, benches and bike racks for the office.   Beyond the internal reduction of waste at FYH facilities, the company is also making it easier for customers of the brand to reduce and recycle. They've changed the labeling of their products, in hopes that consumers opt to recycle their packaging rather than throwing it away. FYH continues to try to improve on sustainability efforts and actively engages employees to adopt greener habits by offering free electric car charging, providing “Meatless May” lunches and organizing employee volunteer events to help local non-profit organizations like Food ForwardHeal the Bay, and TreePeople.

A tale of two snack pouches

Spoon-fed applesauce has become something of a relic of the past in little over a decade, replaced by on-the-go fruit pouches that toddlers can squeeze in one hand and slurp. The pouches are easy to stash in a purse, last for months in a pantry and are relatively nutritious.   But while parents appreciate the convenience of these minimal-mess snacks, many also cringe when they toss the single-use packaging into the trash. Most of these pouches are made of layered films and other plastic materials that are difficult, if not impossible, for U.S. municipal recycling systems to peel apart and process. So, to the landfill they go.   Demand for flexible food packaging is set to become a $3.4 billion market by 2022, a growth of nearly 4 percent per year, according to a Freedonia Group report several years ago. That includes an array of pouch designs beyond the juvenile market, such as stand-up zippered bags for things like popcorn and cookies. Food companies increasingly favor the bendable, smashable packaging for being lightweight and therefore low-carbon when it comes to shipping, so it's in their best interest to improve the sustainability of the materials while winning over the vocal segment of ecologically-aware, social media-savvy millennial moms and dads. And sales of baby-food pouches appeared to flatten or dip slightly in the past couple of years, according to market research by Spins and IRI.   That's partly why two leaders in the world of pureed-fruit pouches have invested years toward reinventing their packaging, some of which is set to reach the market as soon as this spring. GoGo Squeez maker MOM Group and Nestlé's Gerber have each taken a different tack, ultimately picking different polyolefins for their primary material: polyethylene for GoGoSqueez and polypropylene for Gerber.   At this point, however, neither of the new pouches will be accepted by most mainstream recyclers in the United States, which mostly focus on paper and corrugate and lack the materials sorting-and-stripping capabilities to handle flexible plastics. The companies appear to be banking on the potential that recycling innovations that are widespread in Europe will eventually reach U.S. shores, yet this is largely beyond their reach. (Nestlé is making separate investments in this direction; more on that below.)   Here's what's inside the pouch-reinvention efforts by each company.    

MOM Group: GoGo Squeez

  GoGo Squeez is, if you will, the mother of all applesauce pouches, selling 1.5 billion a year and commanding two-thirds of the market share for fruit and dairy squeezers. You may praise (or blame) CEO and Chairman Michel Larroche of parent company MOM Group, for popularizing squeeze-and-slurp pouches for applesauce and other fruit purees in the United States, starting in 2008. (To be fair, Plum Organics brought its baby food pouches to market a year earlier.)   The products are based around a French predecessor Poms Potes, which Larroche, a 10-year veteran of Heinz in Europe, once smuggled across cross-Atlantic flights by the suitcase-load to his brother's family in Manhattan. When Larroche joined MOM Group, a company with century-old roots in France, the father of three athletic daughters saw an opening in the snack-happy North American market.   Americans quickly snapped up GoGo Squeez, first in Costco, Whole Foods and Target stores. In two short years it reached $100 million in annual retail sales, becoming ubiquitous in playgrounds and playgroups.   "We have a very nice product, very convenient," Larroche told GreenBiz. "But my obsession is to make it perfect, and making it perfect means we need to make progress on recycling. This movement is going to grow. The sensitivity of consumers to better protect the earth is very important, especially among the youth, and something we fully embrace."     GoGo Squeez describes four CSR focus areas in terms of "caring nutrition, environmental footprint, sustainable agriculture and well-being." It prides itself on running factories located near apple orchards outside Boise, Idaho and Traverse City, Michigan. And it snubs artificial sweeteners and preservatives, offering GMO-free, organic fruit that's highly preferable over a mush-prone banana in a hot diaper bag.   Five years ago MOM Group began reinventing its pouches. The current format is made of multiple materials including inner aluminum with a BPA-free plastic layer, a "recyclable" outer paper layer, and oxygen barriers for freshness.   By 2022, all of GoGo Squeez's new, all-polyethylene packages will adopt a format that reduces some of the layering. Eliminating aluminum will slash the CO2 impact in half, Larroche said. It also makes for more flexibility, which spurred the company to rework "the origami of the pouch." The signature propeller-shaped polyethylene cap will feature 40 percent less plastic.   A collaboration since 2011 with upcycling innovator TerraCycle enables consumers to mail in empty GoGo Squeez packs with caps so they can be repurposed into playground equipment, notebooks and other products. The MOM Group says the new pouches will also become easier for upcycling through TerraCycle.   "Not everything will be recycled in the beginning but at least we’ll push in the right direction," Larroche said of the fact that stateside recycling programs are generally unlikely to handle even the new designs. Yet he hopes that consumers will see MOM Group's efforts as sincere and innovative. He hopes people will pressure political and business leaders to improve the nation's recycling infrastructure, as he also aims to do. The sorting technology exists, but it will take some time, he insists, before it is widely adopted across recycling infrastructure.   "It’s not the end of the story," Larroche said.    

Nestlé: Gerber

  Nestlé's Gerber has also partnered with TerraCycle to offer upcycling options for some of its snack pouches and other containers for children's food. This alliance, launched in fall 2019, should enable the baby food maker to recycle the 20 percent of its packaging that otherwise would not be, in order to meet Nestlé's goal of 100 percent recyclability or reusability across all product lines by 2025.   Swiss conglomerate Nestlé seeks to communicate a corporate message of responsible packaging, sourcing and supply chains. Its commitments toward a circular economy include joining the Ellen MacArthur Foundation's New Plastics Economy commitment to reduce plastic waste in November. Two months earlier, the food giant launched the Institute of Packaging Sciences, which seeks to accelerate environmentally benign packaging and reduce plastic waste.   And back in 2016, Gerber directed research and development toward its fruit puree pouches.   "We started to dig in, asking, what’s the best way to make this a sustainable solution?" said Tony Dzikowicz, associate director of packaging at Nestlé Nutrition. "We started to look at a broad range of suppliers with kind of an open goal, asking, what are the different ways we can get there?"     The Nestlé subsidiary teamed up on the project with Gualapack Group in Italy, with which it had worked for a number years on pouches made of polyethylene (PET), nylon and a multi-layer laminate. Gualapack specializes in low-footprint, circular solutions for packaging, which span a range of processes including extrusion, lamination, printing, pouch making and injection molding. It has nine production plants in seven countries and nearly 2,000 people on its payroll.   "That’s when it got more real, from exploratory investigations to doing more trials.  That’s when we found the path," Dzikowicz says. "From there it’s been a series of evolutions. Multiple iterations ultimately got us to the first monomaterial pouch."   In 2018, the team settled with Gualapack on what it calls the industry's first single-material pouch. The pouch and cap are both 100-percent polypropylene, which was chosen for its recyclability in Europe. The results are open source, so other companies can use the technology if they like.   "We had to design our pouch to be intrinsically recyclable, meaning anywhere you go you can remelt and extrude it and make something out of it," said Michelle Marrone, Gualapack's product innovation and sustainability project manager.   In Europe, recycling facilities commonly feature optical infrared high-speed scanners that can "read" incoming garbage and sort out even flexible materials, such as the snack pouches. European Union policy on the circular economy includes a goal for all plastic on the market to be reusable or recyclable by 2030.   In the United States, by contrast, the technology has not been widely invested in and installed. "If [the packaging] is not properly separated and sent to a recycler there’s really no control we have over that," Marrone said.       Gerber will start in May by selling its new pouch, containing organic banana mango puree, on its website. Then it'll take time to scale up to its portfolio of 80 different types of pouch snacks. Anything that contains dairy, which is more challenging to keep fresh than fruit alone, will require a different approach. "This is a step in the process," Dzikowicz said. "There are many things that come together. It’s not only with us, what we as a manufacturer can provide, but the entire system needs to work."   Enter Nestlé's broader packaging mission, which includes supporting local recycling infrastructure. Nestlé joined Materials Recovery for the Future (MRFF) several years ago as a founding member alongside Dow Chemical, PepsiCo, SC Johnson and several other big corporations. The research program from the American Chemistry Council is piloting curbside recycling for flexible plastic packaging.   Under the experimental project, Pottstown, Pennsylvania, has become the first U.S. community to collect and recycle thin-film plastic. Gerber says that both its current and future fruit pouches can be recycled with the technology at play there, which involves sophisticated optical sorting systems. Material from the pouches can be turned into plastic pellets or industrial materials such as composite lumber or roofing.   The ultimate goal of the MRFF project is to accelerate such advancements nationwide. Still, there's a long road ahead before popular flexible packaging can be diverted at scale from the junkyard. Its use keeps on rising, particularly as companies favor the lightweight packaging for reducing energy use and carbon emissions at shipping time.   Representatives on the recycling and materials recovery side tend to curse product designers for failing to consider what happens after their creative packaging is spent. Wanda Redic, senior recycling specialist for the City of Oakland, California, is among those critics who describe the widespread practice of "wish cycling" by consumers who unwittingly  contaminate household recycling bins with items they assume to be recyclable.   A product is not recyclable if no one can recycle it, she said, warning of "putting the cart in front of the horse. They're making a better container that one day will be recycled. In the meantime, it’s going to the landfill."   The people behind GoGo Squeez and Gerber's pouches say they hope they're doing their part to advance better packaging solutions, while recognizing that the patchwork U.S. recycling system leaves much to be desired. One hope is that down the road, if more flexible polypropylene and polyethylene are available for recycling in these new types of formats, they would be collected at greater volumes. And if more plastics enter the market for upcycling purposes, that might spur investment in recycling infrastructure. It's a kind of chicken-versus-egg situation. In this case, the designs may come first.   "We're doing the piece we can do, we’re supporting the MRFF project, but we really need the system to come together," Dzikowicz said.

A tale of two snack pouches

    Spoon-fed applesauce has become something of a relic of the past in little over a decade, replaced by on-the-go fruit pouches that toddlers can squeeze in one hand and slurp. The pouches are easy to stash in a purse, last for months in a pantry and are relatively nutritious.   But while parents appreciate the convenience of these minimal-mess snacks, many also cringe when they toss the single-use packaging into the trash. Most of these pouches are made of layered films and other plastic materials that are difficult, if not impossible, for U.S. municipal recycling systems to peel apart and process. So, to the landfill they go.   Demand for flexible food packaging is set to become a $3.4 billion market by 2022, a growth of nearly 4 percent per year, according to a Freedonia Group report several years ago. That includes an array of pouch designs beyond the juvenile market, such as stand-up zippered bags for things like popcorn and cookies. Food companies increasingly favor the bendable, smashable packaging for being lightweight and therefore low-carbon when it comes to shipping, so it's in their best interest to improve the sustainability of the materials while winning over the vocal segment of ecologically-aware, social media-savvy millennial moms and dads. And sales of baby-food pouches appeared to flatten or dip slightly in the past couple of years, according to market research by Spins and IRI.   That's partly why two leaders in the world of pureed-fruit pouches have invested years toward reinventing their packaging, some of which is set to reach the market as soon as this spring. GoGo Squeez maker MOM Group and Nestlé's Gerber have each taken a different tack, ultimately picking different polyolefins for their primary material: polyethylene for GoGoSqueez and polypropylene for Gerber.   At this point, however, neither of the new pouches will be accepted by most mainstream recyclers in the United States, which mostly focus on paper and corrugate and lack the materials sorting-and-stripping capabilities to handle flexible plastics. The companies appear to be banking on the potential that recycling innovations that are widespread in Europe will eventually reach U.S. shores, yet this is largely beyond their reach. (Nestlé is making separate investments in this direction; more on that below.)   Here's what's inside the pouch-reinvention efforts by each company.    

MOM Group: GoGo Squeez

  GoGo Squeez is, if you will, the mother of all applesauce pouches, selling 1.5 billion a year and commanding two-thirds of the market share for fruit and dairy squeezers. You may praise (or blame) CEO and Chairman Michel Larroche of parent company MOM Group, for popularizing squeeze-and-slurp pouches for applesauce and other fruit purees in the United States, starting in 2008. (To be fair, Plum Organics brought its baby food pouches to market a year earlier.)   The products are based around a French predecessor Poms Potes, which Larroche, a 10-year veteran of Heinz in Europe, once smuggled across cross-Atlantic flights by the suitcase-load to his brother's family in Manhattan. When Larroche joined MOM Group, a company with century-old roots in France, the father of three athletic daughters saw an opening in the snack-happy North American market.   Americans quickly snapped up GoGo Squeez, first in Costco, Whole Foods and Target stores. In two short years it reached $100 million in annual retail sales, becoming ubiquitous in playgrounds and playgroups.   "We have a very nice product, very convenient," Larroche told GreenBiz. "But my obsession is to make it perfect, and making it perfect means we need to make progress on recycling. This movement is going to grow. The sensitivity of consumers to better protect the earth is very important, especially among the youth, and something we fully embrace."     GoGo Squeez describes four CSR focus areas in terms of "caring nutrition, environmental footprint, sustainable agriculture and well-being." It prides itself on running factories located near apple orchards outside Boise, Idaho and Traverse City, Michigan. And it snubs artificial sweeteners and preservatives, offering GMO-free, organic fruit that's highly preferable over a mush-prone banana in a hot diaper bag.   Five years ago MOM Group began reinventing its pouches. The current format is made of multiple materials including inner aluminum with a BPA-free plastic layer, a "recyclable" outer paper layer, and oxygen barriers for freshness.   By 2022, all of GoGo Squeez's new, all-polyethylene packages will adopt a format that reduces some of the layering. Eliminating aluminum will slash the CO2 impact in half, Larroche said. It also makes for more flexibility, which spurred the company to rework "the origami of the pouch." The signature propeller-shaped polyethylene cap will feature 40 percent less plastic.   A collaboration since 2011 with upcycling innovator TerraCycle enables consumers to mail in empty GoGo Squeez packs with caps so they can be repurposed into playground equipment, notebooks and other products. The MOM Group says the new pouches will also become easier for upcycling through TerraCycle.   "Not everything will be recycled in the beginning but at least we’ll push in the right direction," Larroche said of the fact that stateside recycling programs are generally unlikely to handle even the new designs. Yet he hopes that consumers will see MOM Group's efforts as sincere and innovative. He hopes people will pressure political and business leaders to improve the nation's recycling infrastructure, as he also aims to do. The sorting technology exists, but it will take some time, he insists, before it is widely adopted across recycling infrastructure.   "It’s not the end of the story," Larroche said.    

Nestlé: Gerber

  Nestlé's Gerber has also partnered with TerraCycle to offer upcycling options for some of its snack pouches and other containers for children's food. This alliance, launched in fall 2019, should enable the baby food maker to recycle the 20 percent of its packaging that otherwise would not be, in order to meet Nestlé's goal of 100 percent recyclability or reusability across all product lines by 2025.   Swiss conglomerate Nestlé seeks to communicate a corporate message of responsible packaging, sourcing and supply chains. Its commitments toward a circular economy include joining the Ellen MacArthur Foundation's New Plastics Economy commitment to reduce plastic waste in November. Two months earlier, the food giant launched the Institute of Packaging Sciences, which seeks to accelerate environmentally benign packaging and reduce plastic waste.   And back in 2016, Gerber directed research and development toward its fruit puree pouches.   "We started to dig in, asking, what’s the best way to make this a sustainable solution?" said Tony Dzikowicz, associate director of packaging at Nestlé Nutrition. "We started to look at a broad range of suppliers with kind of an open goal, asking, what are the different ways we can get there?"     The Nestlé subsidiary teamed up on the project with Gualapack Group in Italy, with which it had worked for a number years on pouches made of polyethylene (PET), nylon and a multi-layer laminate. Gualapack specializes in low-footprint, circular solutions for packaging, which span a range of processes including extrusion, lamination, printing, pouch making and injection molding. It has nine production plants in seven countries and nearly 2,000 people on its payroll.   "That’s when it got more real, from exploratory investigations to doing more trials.  That’s when we found the path," Dzikowicz says. "From there it’s been a series of evolutions. Multiple iterations ultimately got us to the first monomaterial pouch."   In 2018, the team settled with Gualapack on what it calls the industry's first single-material pouch. The pouch and cap are both 100-percent polypropylene, which was chosen for its recyclability in Europe. The results are open source, so other companies can use the technology if they like.   "We had to design our pouch to be intrinsically recyclable, meaning anywhere you go you can remelt and extrude it and make something out of it," said Michelle Marrone, Gualapack's product innovation and sustainability project manager.   In Europe, recycling facilities commonly feature optical infrared high-speed scanners that can "read" incoming garbage and sort out even flexible materials, such as the snack pouches. European Union policy on the circular economy includes a goal for all plastic on the market to be reusable or recyclable by 2030.   In the United States, by contrast, the technology has not been widely invested in and installed. "If [the packaging] is not properly separated and sent to a recycler there’s really no control we have over that," Marrone said.       Gerber will start in May by selling its new pouch, containing organic banana mango puree, on its website. Then it'll take time to scale up to its portfolio of 80 different types of pouch snacks. Anything that contains dairy, which is more challenging to keep fresh than fruit alone, will require a different approach. "This is a step in the process," Dzikowicz said. "There are many things that come together. It’s not only with us, what we as a manufacturer can provide, but the entire system needs to work."   Enter Nestlé's broader packaging mission, which includes supporting local recycling infrastructure. Nestlé joined Materials Recovery for the Future (MRFF) several years ago as a founding member alongside Dow Chemical, PepsiCo, SC Johnson and several other big corporations. The research program from the American Chemistry Council is piloting curbside recycling for flexible plastic packaging.   Under the experimental project, Pottstown, Pennsylvania, has become the first U.S. community to collect and recycle thin-film plastic. Gerber says that both its current and future fruit pouches can be recycled with the technology at play there, which involves sophisticated optical sorting systems. Material from the pouches can be turned into plastic pellets or industrial materials such as composite lumber or roofing.   The ultimate goal of the MRFF project is to accelerate such advancements nationwide. Still, there's a long road ahead before popular flexible packaging can be diverted at scale from the junkyard. Its use keeps on rising, particularly as companies favor the lightweight packaging for reducing energy use and carbon emissions at shipping time.   Representatives on the recycling and materials recovery side tend to curse product designers for failing to consider what happens after their creative packaging is spent. Wanda Redic, senior recycling specialist for the City of Oakland, California, is among those critics who describe the widespread practice of "wish cycling" by consumers who unwittingly  contaminate household recycling bins with items they assume to be recyclable.   A product is not recyclable if no one can recycle it, she said, warning of "putting the cart in front of the horse. They're making a better container that one day will be recycled. In the meantime, it’s going to the landfill."   The people behind GoGo Squeez and Gerber's pouches say they hope they're doing their part to advance better packaging solutions, while recognizing that the patchwork U.S. recycling system leaves much to be desired. One hope is that down the road, if more flexible polypropylene and polyethylene are available for recycling in these new types of formats, they would be collected at greater volumes. And if more plastics enter the market for upcycling purposes, that might spur investment in recycling infrastructure. It's a kind of chicken-versus-egg situation. In this case, the designs may come first.   "We're doing the piece we can do, we’re supporting the MRFF project, but we really need the system to come together," Dzikowicz said.        

Hippie Haven offering no-contact recycling at downtown store

Rapid City’s first zero-waste store wants to help residents live sustainably during the COVID-19 quarantine.   Eco-friendly Hippie Haven opened last year downtown to help customers reduce their environmental impact by offering plastic-free, vegan and cruelty-free alternatives to everyday products. The store stopped allowing customers inside on April 6, and now is offering no-contact recycling for items that cannot be recycled elsewhere in Rapid City.   Hippie Haven owner Callee Ackland said the store’s location at 806 St. Joseph St. has an entryway outside the store’s front door where people can safely drop off recycling without coming in the store or leaving recycling on the street.   “Everything changes so quickly (because of COVID-19), but we definitely plan to continue accepting recycling,” Ackland said.   In partnership with TerraCycle, since Hippie Haven opened last year it has participated in the Zero Waste Box program to provide solutions for difficult-to-recycle waste. Ackland said her store can accept the following: all razors and razor blades; contact lenses; contact lens packaging, contact solution bottles and plastic contact lens cases; pop can tabs; crayons; sunglasses and eyeglasses; tennis balls; shoes; any type of makeup and makeup packaging; shampoo, conditioner and hairspray containers; soap and lotion bottles; shaving cream packaging; toothpaste tubes, toothbrushes and floss containers; and plastic straws.   In March, Hippie Haven also co-sponsored a TerraCycle Straws Zero Waste Box at Pure Bean Coffee House.   “There are so many pieces of plastic out in the world with more and more being made every day,” Ackland said. “These plastics break down into microplastics that impact all levels of life. Recycling every bit that we can and preventing new plastic from entering the ecosystem is crucial."   Hippie Haven is still accepting orders online or by phone for its eco-friendly home goods and beauty products. Customers can have products shipped or use the store’s curbside pick-up service, Ackland said.   For the health and safety of its customers, Ackland said Hippie Haven has moved its upcoming workshops online. A schedule of upcoming workshops will be finalized and announced later this week, Ackland said. Go to facebook.com/hippiehavenshop/ and at @hippiehavenshop for announcements and a schedule of upcoming virtual events.   Rapid City Mayor Steve Allender, in keeping with recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control for slowing the spread of COVID-19, is urging everyone to stay home as much as possible. He said Monday he would likely soon make a citywide recommendation for people to stay home. One sustainable stay-at-home activity Ackland is especially excited to support is gardening.   “I’ve been so happy to see the resurgence of victory gardens. Food sovereignty is one of the most important issues of our lifetime. We want to help in any way we can,” she said.   Ackland and her staff encourage people to start with what they have at home; a recent social media post provided tips on growing vegetables from food scraps. On her weekly podcast at hippiehavenpodcast.com, Ackland recently explained how to grow $700 worth of food in 100 square feet. The podcast focuses on a range of sustainability topics.   “We’re going to be hosting a planting party on Instagram live soon and we’re inviting viewers to be planting gardens along with us,” Ackland said. “People can use this extra time they might have to learn how to reduce their waste, even in these changing conditions.”

Positive Luxury launches webinar series to inspire and promote change

Sustainability platform Positive Luxury has launched a brand-new weekly webinar series designed to educate, innovate and inspire viewers to be a catalyst for change.         Every Thursday at 2pm (UK time), a group of experts will explore various topics from leadership to creativity in The Power Series. The next edition on 9 April, The Power of Narrative, will feature a panel including journalist and author Dana Thomas, deputy editor at the Financial Times How to Spend It Magazine Beatrice Hodgkin, and CEO of Garrard & Co. Limited Joanne Milner.   They will discuss how the stories we tell can still be powerful, even without a product launch or big announcement. The format of the free Power Series is a 30-minute discussion followed by a Q&A from the audience, with all webinars being subsequently uploaded to YouTube. Other upcoming episodes will delve into The Power of Good Leadership (16 April), The Power of Circularity (22 April) and The Power of Wellness (30 April), with panellists including Valerie Keller, CEO of Imagine; Tom Szaky, founder of TerraCycle; Vanessa Jacobs, CEO of The Restory and mindfulness coach Terrence The Teacher. Positive Luxury, co-founded by Diana Verde Nieto, is the company behind the Butterfly Mark, the symbol awarded to luxury brands to demonstrate a positive social and environmental impact. Christian Dior, GivenchyAnya Hindmarch and Yves Saint Laurent Beauty are some of the luxury brands which have earned the mark.

Gerber Delivers First Single-Material Baby-Food Pouch

Recyclable polypropylene pouch available in May that replaces an unrecyclable multilayer structure is a move toward a more circular economy.   Gerber will make available introduce something that has not been seen before: The world’s oldest and largest baby food company will introduce in May the first single-material baby food pouch.   "Designing with a single material creates greater value for the recycling industry, promoting the development of better recycling infrastructure," says Gerber Associate Director of Packaging, Tony Dzikowicz. "After more than two years of experimenting and innovating, we were able to help create a first-of-its-kind solution for baby food that meets the safety and freshness requirements for our little ones."   With parent company Nestlé as a founding member of Materials Recovery for the Future (MRFF), a research collaborative committed to creating recycling solutions, Gerber is helping to expand curbside recycling for the pouch. MRFF's pilot program in Pottstown, PA, is the first curbside recycling program in the U.S. to accept flexible plastics such as these.   "We believe the baby food industry should help create a world where babies thrive, and initiatives like this one help us go beyond nutrition to protect the planet," said Gerber President and CEO Bill Partyka.   Dzikowicz, Gerber’s Sina Hilbert, brand manager & sustainability lead, and Justin Welke, Nestlé’s packaging project manager, respond collectively to Packaging Digest’s questions about the brand’s new recyclable flexible packaging.   Comment on Gerber’s previous pouch structure.   Gerber: Gerber launched its first baby food pouch in 2011 with a multi-material structure made from polyethylene terephthalate (PET), foil, and polyethylene (PE). In 2017, we began the transition to a non-foil multi-laminate structure to provide transparent and window options in the pouches so consumers can see the product inside.   In 2017, Gerber began conducting trials with Gualapack, the world leader of premade spouted pouches, with the goal of bringing the industry’s first mono-material pouch to market. Coming to market in May 2020, this first-of-its-kind mono-material polypropylene (PP) pouch is a step towards Gerber’s goal to make 100% of our packaging recyclable or reusable by 2025.   What’s the difference with the new recyclable pouch structure?   Gerber: The new mono-material pouch is made from polypropylene (PP), which is one of the most common and versatile forms of plastic. The current industry standard for pouches is a multi-material structure using two layers of plastic with an aluminum layer in between. This structure is not currently municipally recyclable in the U.S. due to outdated infrastructure that struggles to sort and process flexible plastics.   Moving to a mono-material structure increases the value of the recycled material for the recycling industry, promoting the development of better recycling infrastructure and encouraging a circular economy approach to plastics.   What’s the importance of curbside recyclability vs. #2 PE In-store Recycle Ready?   Gerber: We know that many parents rely on plastic — and pouches specifically — for convenience, durability and portability. However, municipal recycling infrastructure in the U.S. currently struggles to recycle most flexible packaging, including pouches.   Currently, the #2 Polyethylene (PE) in-store drop off stream is limited to plastics that are “clean and dry.” Because baby food is a wet product, it is challenging to clean and dry pouches to the level that is compatible with current store drop off programs without contaminating the waste stream.   Our new mono-material pouch is 100% recyclable through our national recycling program with TerraCycle.   The pouch is curbside recyclable for consumers in Pottstown, PA, thanks to MRFF’s pilot.     Please summarize the MRFF pilot.   Gerber: MRFF is dedicated to creating municipal recycling solutions for flexible plastic packaging such as baby food pouches, plastic shopping bags, and more. With Nestlé as a founding member, Gerber is helping to expand curbside recycling for the pouch — and all baby food pouches.   MRFF’s pilot program in Pottstown, PA, is now the first curbside recycling program in the U.S. to accept flexible plastics — including our mono-material pouch and all baby food pouches — alongside other recyclable materials. The pilot facility is aiming to recycle 6 million pounds of flexible plastic packaging annually beginning this year.   What were the packaging considerations?   Gerber: We designed the new mono-material pouch to stand out from our other products by applying a fresh design that features our key achievement, “First single-material pouch designed for the future of recycling.”

Clean Sweep: What Some Beauty Brands Are Doing to Be More Sustainable

As we all strive to make changes that support a greener world, find out how your favourite brands are taking steps towards a cleaner and more sustainable future.  

Wind Power

Did you know that Joico and Zotos Professional Brands are manufactured in a near-zero waste facility that’s partially powered by wind? As for their packaging, Joico’s LumiShine, Vero K-PAK Color, and Blonde Life tubes are all packaged in paperboard cartons made from 100 per cent recycled fibre. The brand’s shampoo (and several spray) bottles are crafted with up to 25 per cent post- consumer recycled materials. With continued sustainable efforts, Joico is aiming to reduce its operations’ carbon footprint by 75 per cent by 2030.  

Ocean Drive

To help fight the ongoing issue of ocean pollution, Kevin.Murphy has reinvented its signature square packaging, which as of this year, will be made with 100 per cent recycled ocean plastics. This new initiative will help save the planet from approximately 360 tonnes of new plastic.   Taking their sustainability mission one step further, for every can of aerosol sold, the company has committed to making a financial contribution to help reduce carbon emissions. They’ve also partnered with Ecoheads and Climate Reality Project, a global non-profit organization dedicated to promoting climate change awareness.  

Rooted in Recycling

Celebrating their 40th anniversary this year, John Paul Mitchell Systems is reflecting on its sustainability initiatives. Case in point: The company’s awapuhi farm, which was founded by Paul Mitchell in Hawaii in the early 1980s. This organic farm is self-sustaining and solar-powered, and uses rainwater as its main water source to reduce its carbon footprint. Looking ahead, the company has partnered with Reforest’Action on a mission to plant one million trees by the end of 2022. Though John Paul Mitchell Systems already uses recyclable and post-consumer material for their packaging, they will be updating their Tea Tree packaging this year to be comprised of post-consumer recycled plastic.  

Made in Canada

Leading the way with their sustainability efforts, many of L’Oréal Professionnel’s products are made in Canada—Montreal, to be specific. “Our manufacturing plant is one of the most progressive, and really is the vehicle of this message of sustainability,” says Nadia Petrolito, vice-president, general counsel, chief communications officer & ethics correspondent for L’Oréal Canada. “We’re always looking at how we are creating our products and what are we putting in them—looking at every single ingredient and how much water we’re using; trying to reduce as much as we can.” In addition to featuring solar panelling, the plant includes a unique water filtration system. Rather than grey water being disposed of into the ground, it’s filtered and pumped back into the plant so it can be re-used, saving enough water to fill the equivalent of 14 Olympic-sized swimming pools.   Currently, all of L’Oréal’s colour tubes are recyclable, but for their recent relaunch of Majirel, the company introduced new packaging that includes a cap made of 100 per cent recycled plastic. This change prevents seven tonnes of plastic production per year.   With continued efforts that extend beyond manufacturing, L’Oréal has been carbon-neutral since 2018, thanks to a partnership with Énergir, a natural gas company based in Quebec.  

Matrix’s colour tubes are also made in Canada, with caps comprised of 100 per cent post-consumer recycled materials. Also, all labels and cartons are locally sourced!

 

Nurturing Nature

With a mission to produce, innovate and develop sustainable and professional products, Biolage has been nature-driven since it was founded in 1990. Since then, their Biolage R.A.W. range has taken it one step further with biodegradable formulas that contain ingredients of natural origin, meaning they’re either unchanged from their natural state or they preserve more than 50 per cent of the plant or mineral source’s original structure. Containing no sulfates, silicones, parabens or artificial colourants, all Biolage R.A.W. bottles are also made with post-consumer recycled plastic. This year, Biolage is celebrating its 30th anniversary—marking a key milestone in its history as a pioneering green brand.  

Pure at Heart

As one of the first 100 per cent vegan and sulfate-free professional brands, Pureology has been paving the way for sustainable and innovative haircare. Ahead of their 20th anniversary next year, the brand will be rolling out their first formula renovation this summer. Now their products will also be free of silicones, parabens and mineral oil—in what Pureology calls the “No Nasties” movement.   “These days, sustainability can come with a compromise—compromising on performance if you want something more natural,” says Michelle Tasios, national education manager for Pureology. “With Pureology, we’re not natural—and we don’t claim to be—but what we are is that perfect marriage of science and sustainability, giving people the best of both worlds.”   The brand’s packaging will also be getting a facelift with a new minimalistic redesign. Though its packaging is currently made from 50 per cent post-consumer recyclable materials, the revamped packaging will be made with 95 per cent post-recycled materials, and will be 100 per cent recyclable.  

Proud Partnership

Joining forces with Green Circle Salons, Amika has set a goal to include its salons in the sustainability movement this year. Part of this goal: Streamlining the collecting and recycling of everything used in a salon, from products to hair clippings.   As a brand, Amika is committed to sourcing more sustainable materials for new, innovative packaging. They are also partnering with TerraCycle, an organization that helps “recycle the unrecyclable,” to ensure Amika’s packaging is 100 per cent recyclable. Via TerraCycle’s website, Amika will offer a prepaid shipping label that will allow customers to ship empty bottles and cans to TerraCycle. The company will then store, recycle or repurpose the waste. The partnership will begin in the U.S. later this year, with plans to launch in Canada in the near future.  

For earth month, all of Pureology’s current and new salons will receive a gift of 10 trees planted across Canada.

 

Sustainable at Its Source

Originating from Parma, Italy, Davines has been recognized for their environ- mental efforts—pushing the boundaries of what’s possible with naturally derived ingredients, clean energy manufactur- ing and carbon-neutral packaging. The brand has recently launched Beauty from the Ground Up, a campaign to help raise awareness and funds for Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) in the U.S. and Canada—a cause that’s close to the hearts of Davines’ founders, the Bollati family.  

Packaged with Care

Sustainability has been top of mind for Moroccanoil since the company was founded in 2008. For example, its factory in Israel has solar panels to produce solar power and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. “Sustainability was important to us even before it was popular. We’ve always been aware of the impact the industry can have [on the environment],” says Carmen Tal, co-founder of Moroccanoil.   And since then, the company has taken their environmental efforts to the next level—hiring a full-time sustainability manager last year. Tal says the addition of this role was important in order to advise their team on best sustainability practices. “For any company that is serious about sustainability, it’s a long-term project.”   In addition to making changes within the company, they’ve also partnered with Loop Industries to modify currently unrecyclable plastics. As of now, Moroccanoil Treatment bottles are comprised of 35 per cent recycled glass and the brand’s Color Depositing Masks are made with 50 per cent post-consumer recycled plastic. “Packaging is the first step,” says Tal. “We’ve already taken care of shipping— removing secondary packaging when it’s not necessary—therefore reducing our carbon footprint. We also want to continue finding better packaging options that are post-recyclable plastic, glass, etc.”  

Mothering Earth

As a trailblazer in sustainability initiatives, Aveda is one of the first hair and beauty companies to use post- consumer recycled materials for their packaging. Additionally, all of their products are manufactured with 100 per cent wind power (through renewable energy credits and carbon offsets). For more than 13 years, Aveda Canada has also partnered with WaterAid for Earth Month, raising money and awareness for global water-related issues.  

Going Global

With a focus on sourcing sustainable ingredients and reducing water consumption, Kao (the parent company of Goldwell, KMS and Oribe) has been recognized with several awards and distinctions, which include being named to the Dow Jones Sustainability World Index for six consecutive years, and being selected for inclusion in the “A List” for climate change and water security by CDP, a non-profit organization and global disclosure system for environmental impact.   Last year, Kao hired a new director of sustainability and portfolio for the purpose of sharing and promoting its sustainability plans to salons, stylists and clients around the world.  

More to Love

Additional brands that are doing their part for the environment.   ABBA Founded in the late ’80s, ABBA is one of the first natural and vegan professional haircare brands. Their products contain a unique ProQuinoa Complex of quinoa, barley and soy. They are also free of sulfates, gluten and parabens, and are never tested on animals.   Fanola Made in Italy but known globally, thanks to a social media following, Fanola’s beloved No Yellow and No Orange ranges are available in vegan formulas, and are free of sulfates, silcones or parabens.   Hotheads Hotheads is part of Project Zero, an environmental initiative founded by its parent company, International Designs Corporation, which offsets their carbon footprint by planting trees in areas in need.   Lakmé Last year, Lakmé launched Teknia, a sustainable and vegan haircare range with up to 99 per cent natural ingredients.   Olivia Garden Olivia Garden has three eco-friendly hairbrush ranges: Healthy Hair, EcoCeramic and EcoHair.

Hippie Haven offering no-contact recycling at downtown store

Rapid City’s first zero-waste store wants to help residents live sustainably during the COVID-19 quarantine.   Eco-friendly Hippie Haven opened last year downtown to help customers reduce their environmental impact by offering plastic-free, vegan and cruelty-free alternatives to everyday products. The store stopped allowing customers inside on April 6, and now is offering no-contact recycling for items that cannot be recycled elsewhere in Rapid City.   Hippie Haven owner Callee Ackland said the store’s location at 806 St. Joseph St. has an entryway outside the store’s front door where people can safely drop off recycling without coming in the store or leaving recycling on the street.   “Everything changes so quickly (because of COVID-19), but we definitely plan to continue accepting recycling,” Ackland said.   In partnership with TerraCycle, since Hippie Haven opened last year it has participated in the Zero Waste Box program to provide solutions for difficult-to-recycle waste. Ackland said her store can accept the following: all razors and razor blades; contact lenses; contact lens packaging, contact solution bottles and plastic contact lens cases; pop can tabs; crayons; sunglasses and eyeglasses; tennis balls; shoes; any type of makeup and makeup packaging; shampoo, conditioner and hairspray containers; soap and lotion bottles; shaving cream packaging; toothpaste tubes, toothbrushes and floss containers; and plastic straws.   In March, Hippie Haven also co-sponsored a TerraCycle Straws Zero Waste Box at Pure Bean Coffee House.   “There are so many pieces of plastic out in the world with more and more being made every day,” Ackland said. “These plastics break down into microplastics that impact all levels of life. Recycling every bit that we can and preventing new plastic from entering the ecosystem is crucial."   Hippie Haven is still accepting orders online or by phone for its eco-friendly home goods and beauty products. Customers can have products shipped or use the store’s curbside pick-up service, Ackland said.   For the health and safety of its customers, Ackland said Hippie Haven has moved its upcoming workshops online. A schedule of upcoming workshops will be finalized and announced later this week, Ackland said. Go to facebook.com/hippiehavenshop/ and at @hippiehavenshop for announcements and a schedule of upcoming virtual events.   Rapid City Mayor Steve Allender, in keeping with recommendations from the Centers for Disease Control for slowing the spread of COVID-19, is urging everyone to stay home as much as possible. He said Monday he would likely soon make a citywide recommendation for people to stay home. One sustainable stay-at-home activity Ackland is especially excited to support is gardening.   “I’ve been so happy to see the resurgence of victory gardens. Food sovereignty is one of the most important issues of our lifetime. We want to help in any way we can,” she said.   Ackland and her staff encourage people to start with what they have at home; a recent social media post provided tips on growing vegetables from food scraps. On her weekly podcast at hippiehavenpodcast.com, Ackland recently explained how to grow $700 worth of food in 100 square feet. The podcast focuses on a range of sustainability topics.   “We’re going to be hosting a planting party on Instagram live soon and we’re inviting viewers to be planting gardens along with us,” Ackland said. “People can use this extra time they might have to learn how to reduce their waste, even in these changing conditions.”