Office Depot and OfficeMax brands have launched its Binder Recycling Program to encouraging shoppers to help preserve the environment by recycling old binders through recycling company TerraCycle. Shoppers can bring any old empty binder to an Office Depot or OfficeMax retail location and receive a $2 instant discount off a same-day binder purchase, according to a news release.
Office Depot and Office-Max brands have launched its Binder Recycling Program to encouraging shoppers to help preserve the environment by recycling old binders through recycling company TerraCycle. Shoppers can bring any old empty binder to an Office Depot or OfficeMax retail location and receive a $2 instant discount off a same-day binder purchase, according to a news release.
Recycling company TerraCycle is hosting the 11th annual Jersey Fresh Jam, on Saturday, August 6, New Jersey’s biggest showcase of hip hop art and culture. In partnership with Trenton based graffiti artists, Leon Rainbow and Vicious Styles Crew, TerraCycle is providing their headquarters as a canvas for talent around the country to express their artistic freedom. The event will be open to the public free-of-charge.
More than 250 projects from 40 states were submitted and a panel of judges that include musician and actor Kevin Jonas; enterprise editor and senior reporter at The Huffington Post, Kate Sheppard; CEO of TerraCycle, Tom Szaky; 2016 National Teacher of the Year, Jahana Hayes; and founder of the I am the Maven® blog, Kerri Jablonski, chose the ten most creative ideas as finalists. Now, communities across the country get to choose their favorite classroom lesson.
TerraCycle is just one of the companies that are lending a helping hand to ensure that cosmetic products are recycled properly. A few years ago, the company teamed with beauty brand Garnier to create the Personal Care and Beauty Recycling Program, which is a free program that accepts shampoo and conditioner bottles, eye cream tubs and hair spray pumps.
Düsseldorf, Germany-based
Henkel Corp., a global manufacturer of adhesives, sealants and functional coating based in, has announced it is partnering with
TerraCycle, Trenton, New Jersey, to become the first company worldwide to offer a recycling solution for anaerobic adhesives.
Bear Naked, a TerraCycle program sponsor and a Kashi sister brand, is a company that currently demonstrates its
commitment to sustainability by lowering the
economic boundaries that prevent its packaging from being recycled. Similarly, QAI’s Certified Transitional program eases the uncertainty and economic boundaries preventing farmers from going organic in direct partnership with key brands.
For the past several months, Doyle School collected Colgate brand oral care waste such as empty toothpaste tubes, toothbrushes and floss containers and sent these to Terracycle for recycling.
The school was given one playground credit for every shipment of recyclables sent.
Members of the community also voted daily on a website that tracked their progress and standing among other schools in the competition.
Waterfront Partnership sends all collected cigarette litter to TerraCycle, an international recycling company, for recycling into a variety of useful products. TerraCycle then processes separated cigarette waste into organics and plastics. Organics, including leftover tobacco and cigarette paper, are added to non-food compost. Cigarette filters are recycled into a variety of industrial plastic products, such as shipping pallets.