TERRACYCLE NEWS

ELIMINATING THE IDEA OF WASTE®

Posts with term Include USA X

SASHA FINDS: A PUFFER FOR 2019

You have got your duster coat, your bomber, your trench….but do you have your puffer?  I hate to inform you require anything but the puffer, substantially like final season, is a should.  Sorry, it just is. There are a lot on the market place but the a single I am feeling the most ideal now is by Montreal label, Norden.         This jacket hits all the style higher notes.  It comes in 3 entertaining colorways and if you are down to hit up the men’s section, you will locate 3 additional dope-ass utilitarian designs there as effectively. The match is that completely cropped oversized style and I know this since I personal a single. It really is the sh-t.  The cozy issue is off the charts but what I also enjoy is that it really is super light so you do not really feel weighed down at all. And wait, get this, it will preserve your tits dry and warm from up to -25 degrees.   But there is a twist: this jacket is created from 100% recycled polyester. YAY no down!  In truth, all their pieces are from yarn created from recycled plastic bottles and when you buy a Norden coat, you are obtaining into their closed-loop production chain. So that signifies when you no longer require your coat, you can send it to their finish-of-life plan to make sure that it is repaired and resold or donated to a person in require. If the garment is broken beyond repair, it will be sent to their partners at TerraCycle, exactly where it will be 100% recycled.   Dear god, this is like the Nobel Peace Prize of jackets.

Sunglasses From Flip Flops

One of the items I hate to pick up on the beach is shoes: sandals, tennis shoes and flip flops. Hundreds are thrown in trashcans, left on the beach.. all to be washed out to sea. A new look from Parkville is made from flip flops picked up off the beach.  The Flip Flops are collected in Sri Lanka and FlipYarn – takes flip flop waste and up-cycles program into fashion accessories. Launched on Kickstarter in August they made their funding goal! Good news, plus I love the product! This is what they say. ‘All of our sunglasses are fitted with custom spring hinges for maximum comfort and flexible fit as well as with market leading UV 400 scratch resistant lenses – the top standard in the eyewear industry – in both normal and polarised versions. The product comes in a recycled box with a carry pouch, a microfibre cloth and full warranty.’ Picture this.. I have donated 272 pair of shoes since April of 2019. That doesn’t count the number of shoes have sold or given to friends and family. Currently have over 50 pairs in stock (ready to be sold or donated) Rounding off as an estimated 500 shoes in 6 months. That is a lot of shoes, with the majority being flip flops. o    Ocean Sole, a conservation group and recycling collective in Kenya says that 90 tons of flip flops are carried to the beaches every year. o    Terracycle resells and or shreds flip flops to make into benches. o    Flip flops are also reused in doormats.   All this mean, is that there is no way that flip flops should be thrown into the trash. 2016 Americans spent $2.6 billion  the flip-flop. o    220 million pairs of flip-flops a year by Havaianas. (I have 3 pair, like new picked up off the beach) o    Flip Flops have been found in Whale stomaches. o    Birds pick at the plastic in flip flops and eat even more plastic. The problem is most of the shoes i.e flip flops are singles, meaning it can only go to one place.. the landfill unless they are recycled. Most people will just toss them rather take them to the Goodwill (even singles) for recycling. Here in San Diego, a small independent sandal store will also take back shoes. Randalls Sandals, carries all Eco Friendly, Local or Give Back shoes companies. I hope they make it and help clean our oceans and reuse the millions of tons of flip flops going into our oceans.   Flipyarn hasn’t officially launched yet, but you can visit them here: Flip Yarn   

GEAR ON THE GO: 2019 GEAR END REVIEW

All good things must come to an end. It’s been an incredible tour and we couldn’t have done it without this years’ sponsors. For our final Gear On The Go blog, we wanted to highlight our favorite gear that we had the pleasure of using on the road this season. image.png When it comes to van-ready cookware, Sea To Summit’s Sigma 2.2 Cookset checks all of the boxes. It consists of two marine-grade stainless steel Sigma Pots, two Delta Light Bowls, and two Delta Insul Mugs that all nest neatly inside the largest pot to make the perfect lightweight and compact kitchen set. The Sigma series is Sea To Summit’s most durable cookware option, making it perfect for everyday use in the van.When we’re on the road we’re adamant about making our own fresh and healthy food. The Sigma 2.2 helps make that a reality. Both pots have convenient strainer lids that rest neatly on the pots when they’re not in use. We’re not always able to park on a perfectly level spot to make our meals. The grippy heat-absorbing base ensures that the pots will stay on our two-burner and not slide off. When we’re finished cooking the Sigma is easily cleaned and stashed back inside itself. The Pivot-Lock handle keeps everything nice and secure which we really appreciate on rutted-out mountain roads.

Big Agnes: Skyline UL Stool

The Skyline UL Stool is the perfect companion for minimalist packers who want to roll extra light or van-dwellers who want to save space. Weighing in at about one pound, this stool packs down so small it fits inside a large-mouth water bottle. This is the smallest addition to the Big Agnes line of camp furniture and your butt will thank you for packing it when you don’t have to sit in the dirt after a long day on the trail. One reason that the Big Agnes camp furniture line is leading the pack is their hubless design. This feature saves space and makes for stronger construction. The poles that make up the frame are color-coded and shock-corded making for simple setup. The Skyline UL Stool comes with direction printed on the stuff sack, but you won’t need them. We’re impressed by the Skyline UL Stool. It’s small but mighty and comes with maximum size to comfort ratio.

Leki: Micro Vario Carbon: Black Series

These trekking poles make us feel like super hikers. They are sleek, comfortable and very strong. These are the lightest and most comfortable poles that we have used to date and this year they have updated the locking mechanism. LEKI was founded in 1948 and has been on the cutting edge of ski and trekking pole technology ever since. The Micro Vario Carbon poles are made out of 100% carbon, making them some of the lightest and strongest poles on the market. Perfect for climbing, trail running or small tours – these “Z” style folding poles pack down and expand in a second and are easy to stash in a crowded van or gear closet. Weighing just eight ounces per pole, these are perfect for the ultralight hikers out there. Everything about using these poles is a breeze. At just 15 inches long when collapsed, they fit perfectly into our gear drawers and are great for taking on a plane. If you have ever used poles while hiking then you know that straps play a huge role in overall comfort. The LEKI Skin Straps used on the Micro Vario will allow you to forget that the straps are even there. The straps are also easy to adjust and lock into place. We’ve used these poles on some fairly aggressive scrambles and they have held up without any problems. With a 20cm adjustment range, they’ll fit almost everybody.

Roofnest: Eagle

The Eagle is Roofnest’s largest rooftop tent. As a family of three (two humans and a dog) we appreciate the extra space it offers. With the interior dimensions of 6’ 10” by 55” the Roofnest has plenty of room for the three of us. What makes this our favorite rooftop tent is the ease of use. When we pull into a camp spot for the night the last thing we want to do is spend a bunch of time setting camp. With the Eagle, you can go from parking to sleeping in a matter of minutes. This becomes especially important if you need to set camp in high winds or rain. Just undo four latches and the Roofnest pops up and you’re ready for bed. It can be mounted on most vehicles and you’ll be able to sleep comfortably on the three-inch-thick memory foam mattress. We’ve had our Roofnest open during quite a few gnarly thunderstorms and we’ve never had an issue with rain getting in. Every tent comes with a retractable ladder, all necessary mounting hardware, and a condensation mat.

Mountain House: Fusilli Pasta with Italian Sausage

Italian in the backcountry? Mountain House has you covered. Their new Fusilli Pasta with Italian Sausage is a hearty home-cooked meal when you need it the most. The entree consists of “spun fusilli pasta in a rustic tomato sauce made with fire-roasted veggies, garlic, basil, and Italian-style sausage”. This has become a go-to for late-night dinners in the van after long days on the trail. The best part is that it has a clean ingredients list that would make your grandmother proud. Mountain House is committed to using only real ingredients. If you look at their ingredients list (which is listed clearly for each option on their website) you will never find artificial flavors, colors, or preservatives. Just delicious, ready in minutes food! One thing we’re stoked for this year is Mountain House’s partnership with TerraCycle to offer free recycling for all empty Mount House pouches.

Sea To Summit: Aeros Down Pillow

Sea To Summit’s new Aeros Down Pillow is the latest and greatest in Sea To Summit’s line of lightweight inflatable pillows. It combines the supportiveness of the traditional Aeros line with a new luxurious down pillow top that offers unparalleled comfort from an inflatable pillow. Weighing in at just 2.5 ounces, you won’t be sacrificing comfort for weight either. We use our’s whether we’re in the backcountry or just hanging out in a hammock by the van. The Aeros line of pillows really has revolutionized the way we sleep in the backcountry. Long gone are the days of sleeping with our heads on a pile of dirty laundry. Having the down pillow top is just icing on the cake. Perhaps our favorite feature of the Aeros Down Pillow is the Pillow-Lock system that ensures your pillow doesn’t slide around in the middle of the night.

Stio: Eddy Shirt LS (Men’s and Women’s)

The Eddy Shirt from Stio has become our go-to mountain shirt. The water- and wind-resistant long-sleeve can take you from the mountain, lake, or river straight into the office. When you’re on the road and a washing machine is a few hundred miles away this is the shirt you want. It’s hard to keep clothes looking nice in a van, but we store our Eddies in our perpetually cramped drawers and they always look crisp every time we dig them out. Stio is a mountain-inspired apparel company born in Jackson, Wyoming. Their clothing is built tough, and our dirty wardrobe can attest to the durability of their products. We primarily use our Eddy shirts to shield the high altitude sun in the mountains. The Eddy offers a UPF rating of 50+ which helps when you are spending the majority of the day above the tree line. Above all else, the Eddy is comfortable and it looks nice no matter if you are in the mountains or in town – making at a versatile shirt for most occasions.

Lowe Alpine: Halcyon

The Halcyon is a modern take on a traditional mountain pack. Designed with winter in mind, this pack would make a great companion while winter ski touring, ice climbing, and summer rock climbing. The 35:40 liter is large enough to carry your rack, rope, skis, and ice-tools. The Halcyon also is available in a 45: 50-liter version. We’ve used it as an awesome rope bag and will be waiting until winter to put it to its true test. A rope fits comfortable inside, and the side open is great for grabbing snacks without disturbing inside contents. We love the gear loops on the hip belts for easy access tools. We look forward to strapping on some skis, snowboards, and ice axes with the reinforced strap system and pick retainer panel and getting out for a winter adventure.

Sasha Finds: A Puffer for 2019

You've got your duster coat, your bomber, your trench....but do you have your puffer?  I hate to tell you need something but the puffer, much like last season, is a must.  Sorry, it just is.   There are a lot on the market but the one I'm feeling the most right now is by Montreal label, Norden. This jacket hits all the fashion high notes.  It comes in three fun colorways and if you’re down to hit up the men's section, you'll find three more dope-ass utilitarian styles there as well. The fit is that perfectly cropped oversized style and I know this because I own one. It's the sh-t.  The cozy factor is off the charts but what I also love is that it's super light so you don't feel weighed down at all. And wait, get this, it will keep your tits dry and warm from up to -25 degrees.   But there is a twist: this jacket is made from 100% recycled polyester. YAY no down!  In fact, all their pieces are from yarn made from recycled plastic bottles and when you purchase a Norden coat, you’re buying into their closed-loop production chain. So that means when you no longer need your coat, you can send it to their end-of-life program to ensure that it is repaired and resold or donated to someone in need. If the garment is damaged beyond repair, it will be sent to their partners at TerraCycle, where it will be 100% recycled.   Dear god, this is like the Nobel Peace Prize of jackets.

How Kellogg’s, Berry Global and Dow Solved a Packaging Dilemma

A cross-team collaboration successfully created new packaging for the Bear Naked granola brand, designed for recyclability and sustainable-barrier packaging.
Presenting at the Innovation Stage at PACK EXPO Las Vegas, Ashley Leidolf and Holly Dinnill of Dow, Shannon Moore of Kashi, and Paul Wolak of Berry Global explained how a cross-team collaboration between brand and suppliers made Bear Naked’s packaging more recyclable and sustainable.   When the brand was launched in 2002, Bear Naked chose not to use bag-in-box, becoming the first granola brand to be offered in a pouch. Sustainability was important to the brand owners, so the packaging changed from 2008 to 2018 and was offered in a Terracycle pouch – it was the #1 selling brand with 500,000 units recycled.   Shannon Moore, Lead Packaging Engineer at Kashi, said that a few years ago the brand owner came to her and asked what it would take to “go beyond” Terracycle and get to curbside or store-drop recycling. Because recycling is also important to the brand’s consumers (most of whom are under the age of 40), Moore said that the number one customer comment has been “How do I recycle this bag?”   When the decision was made to change to a more sustainable packaging, Moore said the brand wanted to keep the same look for the consumers, so it was important to maintain the production speed and clarity of the package to keep the print enhancements such as surface matte. The brand was having trouble finding a good solution for a hermetically sealed bag, which is necessary due to the number of whole nuts and dried fruit in the product. Kellogg and Dow already had a partnership in place, so Moore engaged the internal team to find a solution by working with Dow, and she said the project was able to move forward more quickly by working together as a team. “The first thing we did as a team,” said Moore, is walk them through our entire manufacturing network, to see how we operated, so that each supplier could work together.”   Paul Wolak, Senior Technical Director at Berry Global said that when working on the project and taking shelf life into consideration – “we focused on how to deliver a better moisture barrier and better oxygen barrier as a starting place.” The team landed on a mono-material recycle-ready 9-layer structure that satisfied all of the necessary properties.   Said Holly Dinnill, Marketing Director at Dow and the moderator of the presentation, “What we’ve created here as a team is really a multi value-chain effort to create a package that can be fully recyclable and be used with cases that need barrier.”   The brand is on a mission from the top down to comply with 2025 recyclability goals and is now 6 years ahead of schedule to comply. To learn more about the How2Recycle program, click here. To see a previous Show Daily article about this packaging, click here.   Make plans to visit PACK EXPO East in Philadelphia, March 3-5, to see on-trend packaging machinery and materials, and sustainable solutions.

Globl war on plastic waste gathers speed with powerful new allies

Terry Slavin rounds up a slew of new initiatives as BlackRock enters partnership with the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, Unilever commits to halve its use of virgin plastic by 2025, PepsiCo launches a green bond, and Andrew Forrest's Sea the Future initiative to tax plastic use wins Fortune 500 backing   BlackRock this week announced a partnership with the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, the latest in a trio of recent developments that hold hope for progress on tackling the plastic waste crisis.   At a press conference in London announcing the tie-up, Evy Hambro, global head of thematic and sector investing at BlackRock, said the BGF Circular Economy Fund, which went live last week, was the first step in an ongoing global partnership with the UK circular economy charity.   The new thematic fund, which starts with $20m in seed funding, will invest in businesses already benefiting from, or contributing to, the transition to a circular economy, and has been designed by tapping into the nine-year-old foundation’s expertise.     Hambro said he had been working on a thematic fund invested in the mining sector over the past three years.   The fund had looked at investing in recycling and more sustainable battery technology, but realised there was a much bigger investment opportunity in the circular economy because it is driven by global megatrends like combating climate change, resource scarcity, technological disruption and rapid urbanisation.   He said when he met Ellen MacArthur at an event in London “it was a lightbulb moment. … I was convinced we could get to a point where we could actually deliver what she was talking about to our clients.”   He said the fund broke new ground, and was the result of complex negotiations between the charity and BlackRock to structure both the portfolio and the partnership itself. “But the more work we have done in this space, the more enthused we get about the impact the companies we are investing in are having on the world.”   Sumana Manohar, head of thematic research for fundamental active equity, who is co-managing the new fund, said it would invest circular economy “adopters” like Adidas, which made 11 million pairs of shoes last year using upcycled plastic waste from the oceans, “enabler” companies like TOMRA, the Norwegian reverse-vending machine company, and circular economy beneficiaries like Ball Corporation of the US, the largest manufacturer of aluminium cans, which has seen a surge in business as food companies seek alternatives to plastic packaging.   The fund will not only focus on plastics, but invest in other companies in the circular economy, including fashion, food systems, mining and e-waste. BlackRock has identified around 800 firms that the fund could back in the future, Manohar said.       Andrew Morlet, chief executive of the foundation, said the links between circular economy and climate are increasingly being understood. He added: “The way we make and use products is 45% of the solution space to reach the 1.5C climate agenda, and companies are waking up to the economic opportunities this represents,” with hundreds of companies, and thousands of products moving into this space.   But he said there was an urgent need to accelerate the transition to a more circular economy, and it was critical to attract investors to back circular economy solutions. “By working with BlackRock we are hoping to raise awareness and interest” in the circular economy as an investment opportunity.   Rob Opsomer, who leads on systemic initiatives at the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, pointed out that the foundation already has some financial partners, including Intesa Sanpaolo, the Italian banking group, but the BlackRock partnership was an important further step in a direction that the foundation will increasingly pursue.   Asked by Ethical Corporation whether the fund fell into the category of ESG (environmental, social, governance) or impact investment, Hambro said: “It’s not ESG, though ESG is integral to the focus of the fund. Nor is it a pure impact fund. We are sitting in an area that touches a whole range of points that we think are important for our clients. In a way we’re trying to create value from the transition of the global economy in this [circular economy] direction, but doing it in a responsible way, with ESG embedded in the investment process.”   The BlackRock announcement came on the same week that another global partner in the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, Unilever, announced ambitious new targets for cutting plastic waste, in line with the foundation’s New Plastics Economy Global Commitment.   CEO Alan Joppe said Unilever will halve its use of virgin plastic by 2025, by reducing its absolute use of plastic packaging and accelerating its use of recycled plastic, and by helping to collect and process more plastic packaging than it sells.       “We can only eliminate plastic waste by acting fast and taking radical action at all points in the plastic cycle,” Joppe said.   “This demands a fundamental rethink in our approach to packaging and products. It requires us to introduce new and innovative packaging materials and scale up new business models, like re-use and re-fill formats, at an unprecedented speed and intensity.”   Meanwhile, PepsiCo, another signatory to the New Plastics Economy initiative, this week launched its first green bond, with proceeds from the $1bn offering going to fund its commitment to reduce 35% of virgin plastic content across its beverage portfolio by 2025. The bond is led by Morgan Stanley, which in April agreed a Plastics Waste Resolution “to facilitate the prevention, reduction and removal of 50 million metric tons of plastics waste by 2030 through facilitating green bonds as well as other measures in alignment with these goals”.   Unilever’s Jope is one of the CEOs who is backing the “Sea the Future” initiative, launched at the UN General Assembly last month by Australian philanthropist Andrew Forrest, in which a US-based alliance of Fortune 500 firms will agree to a voluntary levy on their use of plastics derived from fossil fuels.   According to Forrest’s Mindaroo Foundation the levy, of between $300-$500 per ton, will raise more than $20bn annually to incentivise use of recycled plastics for production, passing the cost on to consumers, who will pay an extra two cents per bottle.   The funds will be collected and co-managed by a global environmental and industry body, and channelled into new recycling technologies, collection infrastructure, and the recovery of existing marine and terrestrial pollution.     In an interview earlier this year with Ethical Corporation, Forrest, who has put up $300m for the initiative, said he came up with the idea for a tax on polymers while studying for a PhD in marine ecology, which he completed last year. “The way the plastic market is constructed we have absolutely no choice but to destroy our oceans with plastic,” he said. “And the only way to solve a global system-wide problem is through a system-wide solution.”   He said there are at least a billion people in the world who have no choice but to discard plastic into the environment because of lack of collection and recycling infrastructure.   “If you put a tax on polymers, the raw material behind plastic, then you change the fundamental economic value of plastic all the way down the supply chain. That means when it gets used in Indonesia, or Thailand, or in England, no longer is it a waste product, it's a commodity." Other companies that support the Sea for the Forest initiative include leading polymer producer Dow Chemicals, which is also part of the Alliance to End Plastic Waste, India’s largest polymer producer Reliance Industries, The Coca-Cola Company, Walmart Inc and Tesco plc. Analytical support for the initiative is being provided by SYSTEMIQ, and McKinsey & Co. The Ellen MacArthur Foundation’s Andrew Morlet told Ethical Corporation: “What’s most interesting for me is that for the first time we are seeing a global response to the problem of plastics that matches the scale of the challenge. If this model that [Mindaroo] are promoting gets off the ground and can be successful it will generate hundreds of billions of dollars that can be directed at the collection infrastructure and polymer-to-polymer chemical recycling.”   He added: “There’s a lot of detail to go through and a tremendous amount of work to get this to reality, but Andrew Forrest has put $300m on the table to get this moving, and that is extraordinary.”   Transitioning from a linear to circular economy will be a major theme at Ethical Corporation’s Transform 2019 event in Amsterdam next week. Speakers will include TOMRA, Ball Beverage Packaging Europe, IKEA, Signify, Philips, Tetra Pak, TerraCycle, The Body Shop, Stora Enso, Walgreens Boots Alliance and Rabobank. Ethical Corporation is now part of Reuters Events.

What is Blue Beauty? Plus, Which Brands Are Doing It Right

What is Blue Beauty? Plus, Which Brands Are Doing It Right

October 10, 2019   Green beauty has been a trend for years, yet it’s impossible to officially define. For the most part, green beauty products have naturally derived ingredients that are less harmful than the chemicals that traditional products are formulated with. Green can mean the product is better for the environment versus a comparable one, but not necessarily.   And that’s where blue beauty comes in: it’s green beauty taken to a higher level with thought put into the environmental impact of the ingredients and packaging.  

Next level green

The blue beauty movement is being spearheaded by Jeannie Jarnot, founder of Beauty Heroes , a subscription box and retail store in Northern California.       “The prediction was that companies that want to truly lead the way need to go beyond green, go blue,” she explains. “What this means is that companies need to go beyond being sustainable and contribute to regenerating the environment. To me, the Blue Beauty movement is about beauty, lifestyle and wellness brands that go beyond meeting green standards like clean, all-healthy ingredients and conscious packaging—and contribute in some way to helping to restore the environment.”   As for the difference between blue and green, Jarnot calls it ombre.   “Green brands are usually striving to go blue in some way by innovating in packaging, implementing refillable options, compostable solutions or giving back to the environment in a meaningful way through funding, education or activations.”   Beauty Heroes makes a variety of efforts to help the environment. They’re a 1% For the Planet company, which means that they’ve pledged one percent of top-line revenue to contribute to environmental initiatives. Their brick and mortar store is also a TerraCycle drop-off location for hard-to-recycle items. In addition to launching blue beauty brands, Beauty Heroes is also happy to share resources and information with other companies whose values align with theirs.   Beauty Heroes also has a monthly blue beauty topic that they share with their community.   “We want to consistently take a lens at how we as a company, our brands, and our customers can go blue. One of my favorite campaigns was with Chantel Rodgriguez, who worked on a video with us to help inspire our conscious customers to go blue in their day-to-day lives,” says Jarnot.  

The best of blue beauty

One of Jarnot’s favorite products is Aether Beauty’s makeup line.   “Traditionally, palettes are made of plastic and contain a mirror and a magnet, both of which are not recyclable,” she explains. “Aether’s palette contains no plastic, no mirror, no magnet. So, it’s now taken a product that would generally create a lot of waste and made it zero-waste.”   Another brand making strides in the blue market is the hilariously named Meow Meow Tweet, which uses compostable tubes for their deodorant and lip balm. After all, think about how much of that packaging is disposed of (or lost to the universe, if your track record of keeping lip balms to completion is anything like ours).  

Blue by mail

The Beauty Heroes subscription box has one full-sized product along with deluxe-sized minis. However, anyone who has ever received a subscription box knows how much excessive packaging they have, which is pretty much the opposite of being green and blue.   That’s why Jarnot chooses 100 percent compostable or recyclable packaging.   “We don’t use any plastic in our subscription box or e-commerce packaging. Also, we work with two eco-savvy printers who print all of our collateral and stickers on post-consumer paper. And, when it comes to the packaging of the actual products, each month is different, and we look to make sure that packaging is not excessive. Those are some of the ways we are green. The going blue part comes in with all our other initiatives,” states Jarnot.   “We use our platform to talk about conscious consumption, replacing single-use plastic, and offering viable alternatives. I genuinely believe that we don’t have to give up all of our comforts and beautiful green beauty products to be better for the environment. We will need to lose some perceived convenience, but we’ll adapt. We have to!”  

Retail location

In August 2019, Beauty Heroes opened up a brick and mortar location in downtown Novato, California, near San Francisco in Marin County. While there’s a lot of competition, Beauty Heroes is currently the only blue beauty store, making it truly unique in a very saturated market.       “I heard that people wanted to experience Beauty Heroes in person, and I started thinking about a unique concept that would be a space for beauty and wellness hospitality, different from anywhere out there. I got excited about it, and everyone around me was really into the idea,” Jarnot says.   And as compostable as everything at Beauty Heroes is, they’ve designed it to be just as Instagramable. After all, it’s the easiest way to spread the word about blue beauty.

Sweet effort aims to keep Halloween candy wrappers out of local landfills and from littering streets

TOLEDO, Ohio — Halloween candy is sweet, but a scary fact is that those wrappers are not recyclable in curbside containers or drop-off locations. To divert candy wrappers from local landfills and keep them from becoming litter, Keep Toledo/Lucas County Beautiful is kicking off an initiative to collect them.   In partnership with the Board of Lucas County Commissioners, the city of Toledo, and Civil & Environmental Consultants, Inc. Keep Toledo/Lucas County Beautiful will collect the wrappers this Halloween season. Once collected, the wrappers will go to TerraCycle, a company that specializes in recycling hard to recycle items.   Candy Wrapper Recycling Boxes are available from the agency and can be requested for specific events, like a neighborhood trick or treat or a trunk or treat event. Drop -off locations will be listed on the Keep Toledo/Lucas County Beautiful website and social media, and should stay on location until at least Nov. 15, which is America Recycles Day.

The world's biggest brands have a garbage problem. This man can help

The world's largest consumer goods companies have a big problem: The plastic waste that piles up in landfills and oceans has their corporate logos all over it. To try to fix it, they're increasing recycling efforts, sponsoring beach cleanups and switching up packaging materials, among other things. The most radical effort, though, is also the hardest to pull off: Get consumers to switch from single-use to reusable packages.   It may seem impossible, but Procter & Gamble, Unilever, Nestlé, Clorox and PepsiCo are all trying it out, thanks to Tom Szaky.   Szaky is the founder and CEO of TerraCycle, a recycling company based in Trenton, New Jersey. He's also the driving force behind Loop, an innovative service he likens to a 21st century milk man. Launched in May, the service sells brand-name goods like Tide detergent, Pantene shampoo, Gillette razors and Häagen-Dazs ice cream all in reusable packages. Participants pay a refundable deposit for each package, use the products, throw the empty containers into a Loop tote and send them back to be cleaned and refilled. Tom Szaky, founder and CEO of TerraCycle, convinced Procter & Gamble, Unilever, Nestlé and other large consumer goods makers to launch a new shopping service using reusable packaging. (Mark Kauzlarich for CNN) Tom Szaky, founder and CEO of TerraCycle, convinced Procter & Gamble, Unilever, Nestlé and other large consumer goods makers to launch a new shopping service using reusable packaging. (Mark Kauzlarich for CNN)   The stakes are high for all involved. For Szaky, failure could mean the loss of a significant investment and his reputation as a green business whiz. The companies, too, poured time and money into the project. For them, failure means one fewer solution to their plastic waste problem.   It's "the biggest risk we've ever done," Szaky told CNN Business's Rachel Crane. "It's in every way a massive gamble."   But Szaky is no stranger to risk.   Can one man bring back reusable packaging?    Durable packaging fell out of fashion decades ago, when cheap, disposable plastics replaced glass bottles and containersToday, reintroducing the public to a system of reusable packaging is a tall orderConsumers have become accustomed to the ease of quickly tossing things away. Reusing items, however, requires them to take an extra step to preserve the packages. That's why, when Lisa McTigue Pierce, executive editor of Packaging Digest, heard about Loop, she was skeptical.   "When I first got the information, I thought to myself, 'Wow, this is never going to take off,'" she said. But then she had another thought. "This is Tom Szaky at TerraCycle ... one of the best marketers I have ever seen," she said. "If anybody could make this work, it's going to be Tom."   That's because Szaky has a history of pulling off the improbable. A number of Loop products, all of which are in reusable containers, are arranged before a Loop tote.  (Mark Kauzlarich for CNN) A number of Loop products, all of which are in reusable containers, are arranged before a Loop tote. (Mark Kauzlarich for CNN)   Eighteen years ago, as a freshman at Princeton, he came up with the idea to sell worm poop as a natural fertilizer. Szaky turned it into a business, and soon dropped out of college to make it grow.   He convinced Princeton undergraduates to work for free, and persuaded older friends to leave their steady jobs for leadership positions at the company. In its early years, leaning on paltry funds from investors and winnings from entrepreneurship competitions, TerraCycle teetered on the edge of collapse.   But then Szaky convinced big-box retailers like Home Depot and Walmart, which were already stocking established fertilizers like Miracle-Gro, to take a chance on his product. It's easy to see why they might have turned him down. TerraCycle's plant food was not only made from waste but packaged in waste, too: used soda bottles and discarded caps.   While Szaky was chasing meetings with major retailers, other eco-friendly companies and environmentalists were swearing to never work with the likes of Walmart. But Szaky has always believed that in order for his green products to make a difference, he would have to work with — not against — corporate America. He's taking that approach with Loop today.   "My goal consumer is someone in the middle of America who may still even not be convinced on climate change, because if I can get him to participate, then we can really change the world," he said. "This is why we're working with the largest manufacturers, the largest retailers. Because that is what America likes today."   Szaky has always been able to get people's attention.   In 2003, when he was just 23 years old, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation ran a short documentary about TerraCycle. In it, Szaky talks openly about his fears and the risk he's taken, revealing that he asked investors for money to build a facility that would help fill nonexistent orders, and that he was pushing a new product he wasn't sure worked. His openness is charming, as is his obvious commitment to the cause: Szaky lugs furniture left behind by Princeton students back to a dilapidated house dedicated to putting up staffers over the summer, and refuses to buy any new packaging — or do anything the "normal" way. Three years later, at age 26, Szaky had landed on the cover of Inc. Magazine, which lauded TerraCycle as "the Coolest Little Start-Up in America."   Since then, he's written four books and maintained his status as a media darling, even launching a TerraCycle reality show called "Human Resources" on the now defunct network Pivot. It lasted for three seasons. Szaky, left, speaks with a coworker in his office. Recycled plastic bottles form a curtain that walls off his office at the TerraCycle headquarters in Trenton, New Jersey. (Mark Kauzlarich for CNN) Szaky, left, speaks with a coworker in his office. Recycled plastic bottles form a curtain that walls off his office at the TerraCycle headquarters in Trenton, New Jersey. (Mark Kauzlarich for CNN)   Szaky, now in his late 30s, is still able to punch above his weight. Two years ago, at the ritzy World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, he landed a spot on stage with the CEOs of Walmart, Alibaba and Heineken to discuss the future of consumption. And he is still successful at enticing employees, some of which have taken major pay cuts, to work out of TerraCycle's modest headquarters in Trenton, New Jersey, which is decorated with trash.   Heather Crawford, vice president of marketing and eCommerce for Loop, left a managerial position at Johnson & Johnson to join TerraCycle in November. "Tom is a visionary who genuinely dreams about a waste-free world," she said. "He has these idealistic goals that he drives the whole team towards, and he asks people to do the impossible."   Over the years, TerraCycle evolved, moving on from fertilizer to transforming items that are difficult to recycle into something new. Today, TerraCycle repurposes used batteries, backpacks, coffee capsules, cooking oil and more. The company is doing well: In the first six months of 2019, TerraCycle reported net income of $1.8 million on revenue of $11.2 million. Sales were up 19% from the same period a year earlier, driven in part by new recycling partnerships with Gillette, Williams and Sonoma, Reebok and General Mills.   In September, TerraCycle also launched a car seat recycling event with Walmart. The event proved so popular, Walmart shut it down early, citing an "overwhelming response."   "We have a successful, profitable, growing business," Szaky said. The new venture could change that. With Loop, "we are sort of putting that on the line," Szaky noted.   "We've put close to 10 million of our own dollars into it. We're going to put even more," he added. "Any big idea requires that leap."   Convenience is key   In order for Loop to work, it has to be easy for consumers.   Today, consumers demand convenience, noted Pierce of Packaging Digest. "Without that — even with Tom and all of his strong partners, the consumer packaged goods companies — I don't know that it would work.   Especially when you think of the cost premium for this service," she said. "That convenience angle is everything."   Although Loop products are designed to cost about the same as their traditional counterparts, users do have to put down a deposit when they make a purchase online. The deposit can range from 25 cents to $10, depending on the item.   Consumers get it back unless they break, keep or lose the package. But some customers may be unwilling or unable to put down a deposit upfront. Individual deposits add up, and if people use the service for long periods of time, they won't get that money back for a while.   Szaky, who recognizes that the deposit could be a roadblock for some, aims to make Loop as convenient as possible. His hope is that customers will toss their empties into a used tote just as they would toss their empty containers into the trash. There's no need to wash them first: Loop handles the cleaning. And thanks to the rise of e-commerce, consumers see delivery as the most convenient option already.   Plus, in 2020, Loop products are slated to be available in major retailers like Walgreens and Kroger. That means, in addition to at-home pickup and delivery, consumers will be able to buy and drop off Loop products in person. Ultimately, Szaky wants to build a big enough network to allow customers to pop into one local store to buy a Loop product, and swing by another to drop a Loop package off.   For Szaky, ubiquity will be a marker of success.   "I would sit back and start feeling like we're doing it when I see Loop pop up unconsciously," he said. "I would feel we really got there where it's a common question of, 'Hey, would you like that in disposable or durable?'"   Szaky thinks things are moving in the right direction. Companies that committed to join the pilot with just a few products have added others, and more are in the pipeline. Loop currently includes 120 products and the service adds an average of two new products every week.   When new brands join, their competitors tend to hop on board, as well, afraid of being outdone. For example, Loop launched with reusable Häagen-Dazs ice cream containers, and soon "the biggest ice cream companies, their competitors, called us and said, 'How do we get involved? How do we go even bigger?'" Szaky recalled. This is "what competition is supposed to do, is keep making products better and pushing each other." Nestlé designed a reusable Häagen-Dazs container for Loop, sparking envy from its competitors. (Brinson + Banks for CNN) Nestlé designed a reusable Häagen-Dazs container for Loop, sparking envy from its competitors. (Brinson + Banks for CNN)   Today, Loop operates in parts of France and the East Coast in the United States, and is used by more than 10,000 people. Orders are continuously increasing each week, and repeat order rates are strong, the company says. Next year, the service will launch in London, Toronto and Tokyo, as well as parts of Germany and California.   Scaling up so broadly and so quickly is risky, however.   "One of the things that keeps me up at night is building out the actual operational scale-up plan," said Crawford.   A lot had to happen just to get Loop to the pilot phase. Companies had to develop new durable containers that were easy to clean and use. It took Nestlé 15 tries to get that envy-inducing ice cream container right. Szaky and his corporate partners have to make sure that packages are delivered, collected, cleaned and reshipped in a timely manner — a complex logistical proposition, especially considering how many different companies are involved. Loop currently uses one cleaning facility in Southeast Pennsylvania to process its US-based orders. But as it continues to expand, TerraCycle says it will need to add more facilities in other parts of the country.   For now, the project is small, and the Loop team is taking careful notes on consumer behaviors, complaints and preferences. But if Loop gets as big as Szaky wants it to, the system will have to work, impeccably, on its own.   "All of the moving pieces, logistically, operationally, new facilities in all of these regions and all of the steps and pieces that need to happen in the expansion plan is something that's going to take a tremendous amount of time and attention from our team, and also support from partners," Crawford said.   If things go wrong — orders get held up, items are out of stock, or people feel burdened by yet another shopping platform — people could give up on the idea of reusables.   Historically, consumers have often valued convenience over the environment. Starbucks, for example, has tried for years to get consumers to use reusable cups, selling durable versions of their cup for a few dollars and offering discounts to customers who bring their own mugs. But the company has consistently found that despite its efforts, just a small fraction of consumers actually bring their own cup to the store. Can Loop finally crack the code, convincing consumers to switch to reusables?   Meanwhile, the clock is ticking: companies participating in Loop won't wait forever for the concept to prove out.   Eventually, "their primary concern is going to be return to shareholders," Crawford said. "At some point in this process it needs to become profitable."   Experts are optimistic that this time, things could be different.   With Loop, Szaky's "timing is impeccable," said Pierce. Consumers are looking for solutions to the plastic waste crisis, and Loop could be a good one. Ultimately, companies may go in a different direction, like biodegradable wrapping or package-free grocery aisles instead of reusable containers. Szaky's company TerraCycle transforms hard-to-recycle items, like batteries, backpacks and coffee capsules, into something new. (Mark Kauzlarich for CNN) Szaky's company TerraCycle transforms hard-to-recycle items, like batteries, backpacks and coffee capsules, into something new. (Mark Kauzlarich for CNN)   No matter what, big corporations will have to seriously reconsider the way their goods are being sold. Unilever said on Monday that it plans to cut its use of non-recycled plastic in half by 2025. To deliver on that promise, the company will have to collect over 660,000 tons of plastic per year, and continue to innovate its product line. In addition to reusable packages, Unilever has tried out soap-like shampoo bars, bamboo toothbrushes and cardboard deodorant sticks, among other things.   "The challenge around packaging is not going to go away," said Tensie Whelan, director of NYU Stern School of Business's Center for Sustainable Business. "Growing regulatory scrutiny of it is not going to go away. Growing consumer concern about it is not going to go away. And growing cost of waste disposal and the environmental impact is not going to go away."   Szaky knows that his partners are in desperate need of a solution. When he first approached companies about Loop, he targeted ones that were featured on a Greenpeace list of worst plastics polluters, because he knew they had a potential public relations crisis on their hands. He's hoping that the scope of the problem will inspire the type of changes needed to make Loop a success.   "Loop is a gargantuan ask," Szaky acknowledged. "We're going into a Procter & Gamble and saying, 'reinvent the packaging of these world-famous products completely, build production lines to fill this reinvented package, oh, and, by the way, I have no proof if anyone's going to buy it at all.'"   And Szaky knows that people are paying attention to what he's doing. Loop has "a very big responsibility," he said. "I think a lot of people are going to think about whether there's a future in reuse by whether we succeed or not."

Schools to participate in KGIB recycling challenge

Reducing landfill waste is the focus of the annual Keep Golden Isles Beautiful 2019 School Recycling Challenge and the public is invited to support local schools in this endeavor, which ends Oct. 18.   “This year’s challenge again focuses on three items not accepted in our local recycling programs: oral care products, pens/highlighters/markers and cereal bags,” said Keep Golden Isles Beautiful Executive Director Lea King-Badyna. “By recycling these used items that are normally tossed in the trash, we are able to make an immediate impact on waste reduction.”   Partners in Education, PTAs, businesses and members of the public are invited to take part in the challenge as well by collecting and donating used oral care products, pens/highlighters/markers and cereal bags to participating local public, private and home schools and institutions of higher education. Simply contact Keep Golden Isles Beautiful to verify a school’s Challenge participation and then arrange to drop collected items at schools no later than Oct. 18.   The collected items will be recycled via TerraCycle, an organization focusing on non-traditional recycling and eliminating the idea of waste.   “Again this year the streamlined process makes it easy for participating teachers and schools to concentrate their challenge efforts and contributions towards community stewardship,” said King-Badyna. “We hope schools will find the experience so easy and fun that they will continue recycling non-traditional items via TerraCycle or our office even after this year’s challenge is over.”   The challenge is made possible by a Hello GoodBuy community grant. For challenge information, to verify school participation or to register for the 2019 School Recycling Challenge, contact Keep Golden Isles Beautiful at info.kbgib@gmail.com or 912-279-1490.