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Recycle 'em if you got 'em: TerraCycle launches cigarette waste collection program

From glue sticks to flip-flops, TerraCycle embraces hard-to-recycle waste with open arms. And with a new collection scheme, the company is taking on the country's most pervasive type of litter: Cigarette butts.

If you’re at all familiar with “waste solution development” firm TerraCycle, you’re probably well aware that the New Jersey-headquartered company largely, but not exclusively, collects difficult-to-recycle trashof the PG-rated, lunchbox-friendly variety: Plastic Lunchables trays and lids, Capri Sun drink pouches, M&M wrappers, plastic yogurt cups, string cheese packaging, and the like.
You’re also probably aware that a heft of the upcycled products designed and sold by the company — backpacks pencil cases, spiral bound notebooks, etc. — are kid- and classroom-friendly. This all makes perfect sense given that TerraCycle’s popular Brigades trash collection programs are often instituted as fundraisers at schools across the country.
That said, the steady flow of trash entering TerraCycle’s main collection warehouse in Trenton and other warehouses across the country is decidedly not of the adults-only variety (save for the Wine Pouch Brigade). And unless you count candy bar wrappers, there hasn’t been a whole lot of vice-centric or eyebrow-raising recycling going on within the wonderful world of TerraCycle — no empty whisky bottles, old issues of Penthouse, sex toys, glass bongs, beer cans.
Until now.
Following the launch of a similar program in Canada earlier this year, TerraCycle has kicked off its first Brigade trash collection scheme in the U.S., a scheme that focuses on both litter removal and landfill avoidance, in which potential recyclers must be 21 and over to participate (and to even access the Brigade homepage).
The form of waste involved that warrants an age restriction?
Cigarette butts and other forms of tobacco-related waste.
Launched with the sponsorship of tobacco manufacturer the Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Company, the Cigarette Brigade allows participants to recycle butts, filters, half-smoked cigarettes, rolling papers, loose tobacco pouches, and the plastic outer wrap and inner foil found in cigarette boxes. Cigarette ash, yes, ash, is accepted as well. Cardboard cigarette boxes and cartons are not accepted, however, as those can be recycled on a local level.
The Cigarette Brigade, a program open to tobacco-using individuals, bar and restaurant owners, building managers, and litter clean-up groups, works much like other TerraCycle Brigade programs: Once a sizable amount of waste is collected by a participant, it is emptied into a plastic bag (True, cigarette butts aren't exactly most of us would want to hoard in a bunch of plastic baggies for a length of time). Participants then place the bag (s), which is later recycled by TerraCycle, in a box before shipping it to the company using a free prepaid UPS shipping label accessed through an online TerraCycle account. Unlike the Canadian Cigarette Brigade that offers 100 TerraCycle points per pound of waste collected, there is currently not a charitable point-incentive program attached to its U.S. counterpart.
Obviously, TerraCycle doesn’t plan on making pencil cases or tote bags out of several ashtrays-full of cigarette butts (although I did spot a cigarette butt picture frame during my tour of TerraCycle HQ last month) and selling them to consumers. Instead, the waste will be used to create industrial products such as plastic pallets while any remaining tobacco will be used in tobacco composting efforts.
In case you were curious, the Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Company, a division of Reynolds American, is the manufacturer of Natural American Spirit brand cigarettes. Obviously, American Spirits aren’t healthier or any less damaging than a pack of Pall Malls or what have you. They still do a body not-very-good. However, a “natural” brand that offers additive-free, organic and 100 percent American grown varieties decidedly lends itself better to recycling efforts than other Reynolds-owned subsidiaries such as Camel.
Says Cressida Lozano, head of marketing and sales for the Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Company in a recent press release:
You don’t have to walk or drive very far to see that smokers often discard cigarette waste in ways that litter the environment. Our company has been committed to environmental sustainability since we were founded 30 years ago, and we’re proud to be the exclusive sponsor of an innovative program to reduce and recycle cigarette butt litter, regardless of which manufacturer made the cigarettes.
And on the topic of cigarette butt litter, Keep America Beautiful states that 65 percent of cigarette butts are disposed of improperly. Additionally, tobacco waste is the number one item recovered during the Ocean Conservancy’s annual International Coastal Cleanup Day — a staggering 52 million cigarette filters have been collected from beaches over the past 25 years.  And even when non-biodegradable cigarette butts are disposed of “properly” — i.e. deposited into an ashtray and then into the trash — they continue to live a long, prosperous life within landfills where they leach toxins into the ground. It’s a less eyesore-inducing alternative to litter, but not much better.
TerraCycle’s stateside Cigarette Brigade program, like its Canadian counterpart, may garner some controversy due to the involvement of a major tobacco company. Still, I think the program — the first of its kind — is certainly warranted. I'm all for it. TerraCycle, a company deeply committed to recycling items that may be deemed by some, as founder/CEO Tom Szaky puts it, as “worthless and unsavoury,” is simply offering smokers and clean-up organizations a vehicle in which to safely dispose of a pervasive, unsightly, and all around nasty form of waste.

Recycle 'em if you got 'em: TerraCycle launches cigarette waste collection program

From glue sticks to flip-flops, TerraCycle embraces hard-to-recycle waste with open arms. And with a new collection scheme, the company is taking on the country's most pervasive type of litter: Cigarette butts.

If you’re at all familiar with “waste solution development” firm TerraCycle, you’re probably well aware that the New Jersey-headquartered company largely, but not exclusively, collects difficult-to-recycle trashof the PG-rated, lunchbox-friendly variety: Plastic Lunchables trays and lids, Capri Sun drink pouches, M&M wrappers, plastic yogurt cups, string cheese packaging, and the like.
You’re also probably aware that a heft of the upcycled products designed and sold by the company — backpacks pencil cases, spiral bound notebooks, etc. — are kid- and classroom-friendly. This all makes perfect sense given that TerraCycle’s popular Brigades trash collection programs are often instituted as fundraisers at schools across the country.
That said, the steady flow of trash entering TerraCycle’s main collection warehouse in Trenton and other warehouses across the country is decidedly not of the adults-only variety (save for the Wine Pouch Brigade). And unless you count candy bar wrappers, there hasn’t been a whole lot of vice-centric or eyebrow-raising recycling going on within the wonderful world of TerraCycle — no empty whisky bottles, old issues of Penthouse, sex toys, glass bongs, beer cans.
Until now.
Following the launch of a similar program in Canada earlier this year, TerraCycle has kicked off its first Brigade trash collection scheme in the U.S., a scheme that focuses on both litter removal and landfill avoidance, in which potential recyclers must be 21 and over to participate (and to even access the Brigade homepage).
The form of waste involved that warrants an age restriction?
Cigarette butts and other forms of tobacco-related waste.
Launched with the sponsorship of tobacco manufacturer the Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Company, the Cigarette Brigade allows participants to recycle butts, filters, half-smoked cigarettes, rolling papers, loose tobacco pouches, and the plastic outer wrap and inner foil found in cigarette boxes. Cigarette ash, yes, ash, is accepted as well. Cardboard cigarette boxes and cartons are not accepted, however, as those can be recycled on a local level.
The Cigarette Brigade, a program open to tobacco-using individuals, bar and restaurant owners, building managers, and litter clean-up groups, works much like other TerraCycle Brigade programs: Once a sizable amount of waste is collected by a participant, it is emptied into a plastic bag (True, cigarette butts aren't exactly most of us would want to hoard in a bunch of plastic baggies for a length of time). Participants then place the bag (s), which is later recycled by TerraCycle, in a box before shipping it to the company using a free prepaid UPS shipping label accessed through an online TerraCycle account. Unlike the Canadian Cigarette Brigade that offers 100 TerraCycle points per pound of waste collected, there is currently not a charitable point-incentive program attached to its U.S. counterpart.
Obviously, TerraCycle doesn’t plan on making pencil cases or tote bags out of several ashtrays-full of cigarette butts (although I did spot a cigarette butt picture frame during my tour of TerraCycle HQ last month) and selling them to consumers. Instead, the waste will be used to create industrial products such as plastic pallets while any remaining tobacco will be used in tobacco composting efforts.
In case you were curious, the Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Company, a division of Reynolds American, is the manufacturer of Natural American Spirit brand cigarettes. Obviously, American Spirits aren’t healthier or any less damaging than a pack of Pall Malls or what have you. They still do a body not-very-good. However, a “natural” brand that offers additive-free, organic and 100 percent American grown varieties decidedly lends itself better to recycling efforts than other Reynolds-owned subsidiaries such as Camel.
Says Cressida Lozano, head of marketing and sales for the Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Company in a recent press release:
You don’t have to walk or drive very far to see that smokers often discard cigarette waste in ways that litter the environment. Our company has been committed to environmental sustainability since we were founded 30 years ago, and we’re proud to be the exclusive sponsor of an innovative program to reduce and recycle cigarette butt litter, regardless of which manufacturer made the cigarettes.
And on the topic of cigarette butt litter, Keep America Beautiful states that 65 percent of cigarette butts are disposed of improperly. Additionally, tobacco waste is the number one item recovered during the Ocean Conservancy’s annual International Coastal Cleanup Day — a staggering 52 million cigarette filters have been collected from beaches over the past 25 years.  And even when non-biodegradable cigarette butts are disposed of “properly” — i.e. deposited into an ashtray and then into the trash — they continue to live a long, prosperous life within landfills where they leach toxins into the ground. It’s a less eyesore-inducing alternative to litter, but not much better.
TerraCycle’s stateside Cigarette Brigade program, like its Canadian counterpart, may garner some controversy due to the involvement of a major tobacco company. Still, I think the program — the first of its kind — is certainly warranted. I'm all for it. TerraCycle, a company deeply committed to recycling items that may be deemed by some, as founder/CEO Tom Szaky puts it, as “worthless and unsavoury,” is simply offering smokers and clean-up organizations a vehicle in which to safely dispose of a pervasive, unsightly, and all around nasty form of waste.

En clôture de la Semaine Européenne de Réduction des Déchets, Annonce du partenariat BIC / VITTEL

BIC et VITTEL améliorent continuellement l’éco conception de leurs produits pour limiter le recours aux matériaux non renouvelables et réduire leur impact sur l’environnement. Les deux marques informent et sensibilisent également le grand public au geste de tri et participent à l’amélioration des filières de recyclage.

¿SE PUEDE RECICLAR UNA COLILLA?

En los ceniceros situados en las puertas de bares y oficinas se acumulan gran cantidad de colillas y de ceniza. Habitualmente, estosresiduos acaban en vertederos convencionales, o bien son incinerados, con la correspondiente liberación de CO2 a la atmósfera. Sin embargo, los restos de los cigarrillos se pueden reciclar y obtener así numerosos beneficios medioambientales.

Tom Szaky at Social Venture Network

SVN was started by a few visionary "dough nuts" (rich hippies), who wanted to use their wealth to make revolutionary stuff happen. It has attracted a mix of successful social entrepreneurs over the years including Ben and Jerry and Virgin's Sir Richard Branson, as well as the late Anita Roddick of The Body Shop. Increasingly there has been a surge of new members representing youth and people of color who are adding richness and capacity to this cultural phenomenon. President Obama certainly would have been welcome at the Social Venture Network's recent 25th anniversary conference, but, some of SVN's younger social entrepreneurs might have stolen some of his fire. For example, Tom Szaky of TerraCycle showed this video as part of his impressive talk. Tom has applied Princetonian cleverness with youthful enthusiasm to reinvent waste streams as product development streams globally. Can this kind of innovation be the legacy of the president's next four years?

Banishing the ugly butts

Tom Szaky collects the most disgusting things. Yucky yogurt containers. Sticky candy wrappers. Old flip-flops. Now, he and his Trenton company, TerraCycle, are onto a new one: cigarette butts, the most common litter items on the planet. (And much, much worse items, but that comes later.) So bring 'em on. Let neither stinkiness nor sogginess nor other manner of nastiness be a barrier. Once in hand, the company will "sanitize" and sort the butts, sending the paper and tobacco to a specialty tobacco composter. The filters will be melted and re-formed into pellets, eventually to end up as two different but butt-worthy items - ashtrays and park benches. For every 1,000 butts sent in by a TerraCycle member (find out more at www.terracycle.com), a dollar will go to the national anti-littering nonprofit, Keep America Beautiful. Szaky said the new butt program "will help to promote our belief that everything can and should be recycled." It's part of his plan to "eliminate the idea of waste." Targeting butts should be easy. They're everywhere. A 2009 Keep America Beautiful study found that 65 percent of cigarette butts wind up as litter. In a quarter century of beach cleanups, volunteers for the Ocean Conservancy have picked up more than 52 million butts - the most pervasive item they find. Many beaches now limit smoking to designated areas. Campuses fed up with spending thousands of dollars picking up the things have considered bans. Still the butts come. They are more than unsightly. Peer-reviewed studies have detailed how metals leach from smoked cigarettes. And how chemicals in the butts are harmful to fish, which is relevant because many butts wind up in waterways. Even when butts are picked up - or not littered to begin with - they add to the waste stream piling up in our landfills. Keep America Beautiful has actually studied butt locales. Most (85 percent) wind up on the open ground, followed by bushes or shrubbery, then around - not in - trash receptacles. The final 15 percent get stubbed out in planters. Most butt litterers "drop with intent." Others flick and fling. And can you guess the spots with the highest littering rates? Hospitals and other medical sites. This is not the first effort to curb butt-waste. A decade ago, Chris Woolson, a Philadelphia software designer, started a website, www.litterbutt.com, through which people can report license plate numbers of automotive butt-flickers. The site now has more than 3,700 members - a passionate group, judging by the posts - who have generated 86,700 reports. Szaky's genius lies in getting regular people to do the collecting. He partners with companies that want to take responsibility for the end-life of their products - in this case, Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Co., a Reynolds American subsidiary. They fund the shipping, processing, and a small donation to nonprofits. So school groups are a big source of items, because the donation can go back to them. Then TerraCycle makes stuff from the items and sells it. Given Szaky's eco-goals, some criticize his collection of non-green "waste" as validating companies that make it. He counters that his job is to collect waste, not to judge it. Indeed, with the butt campaign, he's now partnering with two of the three "Merchant of Death" industries, although he'd rather not put it that way. He's already recycling wine corks from the liquor industry, and the day I talked to him, he was pondering Christmas lights made from the casings of shotgun shells. He judged the result "charming." Others pooh-pooh such radical recycling, contending that it consumes more energy than it saves. Szaky says about 50 independent life-cycle analyses show otherwise. TerraCycle has programs for 47 categories of products, from toothpaste tubes to energy bar wrappers, chip bags to cheese packaging, shoes to MP3 players. As of last week, more than 32 million people had collected nearly 2.5 billion "waste units." More than $4.7 million had been returned to nonprofits. But is there no limit? Trying to think of things just as disgusting as cigarette butts, I teasingly asked Szaky if he was considering a program for, say, chewed gum. Egad. Turns out he is. And it gets better. Or worse. He's in top-secret talks with companies to find uses for soiled diapers, feminine hygiene products, and condoms. What's next? Fingernail clippings?

Joven sunchalense lidera proyecto social de reciclaje de TerraCycle

La Brigada Tang de TerraCycle sigue reuniendo sobres para ayudar al medioambiente y al Jardín San Carlos. Ya se recolectaron más de 50 mil sobres y se entregaron más de 5 mil pesos a la institución educativa. Todo impulsado por Santiago Porporatto, de 15 años. (Por: Prensa Terracycle) - Santiago Porporato, de solo 15 años, se enteró del programa de recolección y reutilización de sobres de bebidas en polvo que Tang y TerraCycle lanzaron en febrero de 2011 y, desde esa fecha, es el encargado de recolectar todos los sobrecitos de la ciudad y enviarlos a TerraCycle. En solo 12 meses juntó más de 50.000 sobres para reciclar. “Cada vez que veo la cantidad de sobres que voy a enviar me pongo muy contento porque está toda la ciudad comprometida con este proyecto, especialmente los niños,” asegura Santiago que ya logró que el Jardín San Carlos reciba 5.000 pesos que usó para comprar sillas que se necesitaban y para colocar el piso de la institución, que hasta el momento no tenía. Es que Tang y TerraCycle, además de evitar que los desechos vayan a los rellenos sanitarios y hacer nuevos productos con ellos, entregan 10 centavos por sobrecito recolectado, a una organización sin fines de lucro o una escuela pública que el participante elija como beneficiario del programa. “Me siento muy feliz haciendo esto porque no solo colaboro con el medio ambiente sino que también ayudo al Jardín para que los niños estén en un mejor lugar. La educación es muy importante en la vida de la persona”, afirma Santiago. TerraCycle lleva un año y medio de operaciones en Argentina y ya hay más de 1.600 Equipos participando de las Brigadas Tang. Se recolectaron más de 2.000.000 sobrecitos para reciclar y se donaron más de 200.000 pesos en efectivo a distintas organizaciones sociales y escuelas públicas del país. Todas las escuelas pueden sumarse a esta iniciativa ya que el programa es completamente gratis. Santiago Porporato, por su parte, parece no descansar:”Un Jardín de una localidad vecina, Tacural, se enteró del proyecto de TerraCycle y de que en Sunchales yo lo estaba llevando a cabo. Se contactaron conmigo y me comentaron acerca de sus necesidades, por tal motivo formé otro Equipo de recolección que ya juntó cerca de 12.000 sobres.” Para más información sobre el programa de recolección y reutilización de Tang y TerraCycle: www.clubtang.com.ar www.terracycle.com.ar