The Lat Phrao Canal in Bangkok, Thailand – along with the other eight sites from around the world – have been chosen for support under the Benioff Ocean Initiative at the University of California Santa Barbara’s Marine Science Institute with a total shared funding of $11 million over the next three years from The Coca-Cola Foundation. Operated through the partnership of TerraCycle Thai Foundation and the Department of Drainage and Sewerage (DDS), Bangkok Metropolitan Administration (BMA), the Thai project has installed two ‘River Plastic Traps’ to capture waste from the stream. The collected waste is then dried and sorted for proper disposal and recycling with data being recorded for future use in raising awareness among community members and promote behavioural change as a sustainable solution.
Caring for hair can be hard, but having a good hair day, every day, doesn’t have to be. We’re on a mission to deliver results & be kind to the planet with products that are cruelty-free, free from parabens and phthalates, and come in sustainable packaging that can be recycled.
That’s why we’ve officially launched our partnership with TerraCycle, an international leader in recycling to make it easy to reduce, reuse, and restyle with the Eva NYC hair products you already love.
Mom always kept a pair of brightly colored kitchen gloves by the sink when I was growing up. Made of latex or rubber, they protected her hands when she washed dishes with hot soapy water or scrubbed the sink with scouring powder.
She also used kitchen gloves when she had to wash something with bleach or to wring out a dirty mop. She used them over and over until they got a hole, and then she would get a new pair.
I always have a pair or two of kitchen gloves at home. Although I usually don’t use them for dishes, they are great for protecting my hands when I scrub a messy grill or pot. I keep a pair under the sink to wear when cleaning out the mop or
scrubbing the tub with something abrasive like baking soda paste. And you can’t beat latex gloves for giving you a good grip when opening stubborn jar lids.
Even when the gloves get a hole in them, they can still be useful. You can keep a pair in the car to wear when pumping gas or clearing snow from the windshield. Put a little duct tape over the hole and, although it’s not pretty, you will have a nice, watertight seal.
I also keep a pair in the gardening bag I take to the
community garden. I can easily rinse them off when they get too dirty.
A California Highway becomes the first state road made from all recycled materials in the U.S.
California-based company, TechniSoil Industrial has created
a process that integrates recycled plastic into road repaving. The process also incorporates 100% of the old asphalt, another aspect that saves on air pollution and landfill waste. The TechniSoil’s polymer-infused roads have also proved to be sturdier, flatter, safer, and more durable than those made with regular asphalt. This new repaving process using all recycled materials was first tested last month, replacing three lanes of 1,000-foot highway in Northern California highway, becoming the first state road made from all recycled materials in the U.S. Los Angeles plans to test out the TechniSoil repaving process on a quarter-mile stretch of downtown L.A. in October.
According to the brand, participants can request a free TerraCycle envelope to recycle their empty packaging.The envelope will arrive within one to two weeks, when customers can then fill it with their products and send with a prepaid return label.
Jennifer Saul, senior vice president of marketing at C’est Moi said:
Creating clean products with recyclable materials that have a thoughtful life cycle is a core pillar of our business. Recycling in the United States has never been simple. Most consumers do not know that recycling came to a screeching halt in January of 2018, when our country stopped shipping all trash, scrap and recyclables to China.
Keep Golden Isles Beautiful recently announced that the School Recycling Challenge will return this year.
The focus of the annual challenge is to reduce landfill waste, and KGIB invites the public to support schools in the endeavor, which will last Oct. 5-16.
“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 KGIB 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, by collecting and donating the items to participating local public, private and home schools and institutions of higher education.
TerraCycle stock is the first equity crowdfunding idea I’ve seen on
InvestorPlace that I might invest in.
The company probably doesn’t need crowdfunding at all. While you can still buy shares at
$100 each through StartEngine, TerraCycle stock has already issued
its first dividend, $2.09 per share.
The recycling disruptor earned
$3.2 million in 2019 on $27.1 million in revenue, up 35% from the previous year. It’s currently seeking $14.8 million on
a $50 million valuation.
TerraCycle isn’t flying under the radar. It was called the “Coolest Start-up in America”
back in 2006. At the time its main business was converting food waste into fertilizer using worms. Now it’s focused on hard-to-recycle plastic, building networks that collect packaging, process it and sell it back as new packaging.
Loop is taking its effort to curb single-use
packaging national with expansion to 48 states.
After a successful pilot run, the revamped “milkman” delivery and
e-commerce platform — which helps to repackage beauty and consumer goods into reusable and refillable
packaging — is looking to facilitate greater circularity.
New Jersey-based company TerraCycle first tested its Loop venture in New York City, and later diffused the premise of circularity to consumers in the mid-Atlantic and abroad to Paris and, most recently, the U.K.
And both brands and consumers are biting.
“Consumers across the country have urged us to bring Loop to them so we’ve scaled as quickly as possible to make that happen,” Tom Szaky, founder and chief executive officer of Loop and TerraCycle, said in a statement.
Loop, the worldwide circular-shopping platform rolled out last year by Trenton, New Jersey-based TerraCycle, is now available in every ZIP code in the 48 contiguous states. Since its launch in the northeastern United States and Paris, with subsequent expansion to the United Kingdom this past July, Loop has experienced considerable growth of its brand partners and product assortment: It now offers more than 80 brands and 400 products globally, and more than 100,000 people enrolled to receive the service.
Loop allows consumers to shop for brands in sturdy packaging that’s reused until the end of its life, resulting in a circular system that aims to supplant disposable single-use packaging. The service features international companies such as Unilever and Nature’s Path and small independently owned businesses alike.
“Consumers across the country have urged us to bring Loop to them, so we’ve scaled as quickly as possible to make that happen,” explained Tom Szaky, founder and CEO of Loop and
TerraCycle. With consumers shopping more and more online this year, the need for our sustainable, waste-free solution has become even more important.”
Circular shopping platform
Loop, which was launched last year by TerraCycle, is now available in every zip code in the 48 contiguous states.
Since its launch in 2019 in the Northeast US and Paris, and, most recently in the UK in July, Loop has seen substantial growth in its brand partners and product assortment; there are now more than 80 brands and 400 products globally and more than 100,000 people signed up for the service.
“Consumers across the country have urged us to bring Loop to them so we’ve scaled as quickly as possible to make that happen,” said Tom Szaky, founder and CEO of Loop and TerraCycle. With consumers shopping more and more online this year, the need for our sustainable, waste-free solution has become even more important."
In the US,
Loop consumers can order more 100 products from more than 30 brands in categories ranging from beauty to grocery to household goods with that assortment expected to double by year’s end, said TerraCycle.
While available solely online today, Loop will be available in-store when it is embedded in its retail partners brick and mortar spaces in 2021, said the firm. Next year, consumers will be able to shop for Loop products in select Kroger stores in the United States. Also in 2021,Loop is scheduled to expand to Canada, Australia and Japan.