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Tupperware creates reusable packaging for restaurants

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Tupperware designed and produced a one-of-a-kind reusable packaging container option for Tim Hortons – one of Loop’s brand partners. The reusable container was created by Tupperware to package Tim Hortons food menu items as part of a pilot program at select locations across Burlington, Ontario. The reusable containers will be available as part of the Loop program on-site at participating Tim Hortons restaurant locations starting today. Aimed at reducing packaging waste through a circular recycling system, Tupperware is able to bring its decades of knowledge in product design and reusability to contribute to the circular recycling model. Tupperware, a 75-year old company, has deep experience and knowledge in engineered resin and sustainable plastics technology. The test pilot with Tim Hortons is Tupperware's first foray into the market as a part of its partnership with TerraCycle's Loop, and will advance Tupperware's No Time to Waste initiative to significantly reduce single-use plastic and food waste.

SIRIUS RSE: L’ORÉAL, CARREFOUR ET TERRACYCLE

Carrefour, L’Oréal et TerraCycle: Une association pour accélérer le recyclage des emballages cosmétiques. En mars 2021, L’Oréal France et Carrefour s’associent. Objectif : donner une seconde vie aux emballages cosmétiques complexes ne bénéficiant pas de filière traditionnelle de recyclage (environ 20 % des volumes). L’Oréal a ainsi déployé, dans plus de 330 hypermarchés et supermarchés Carrefour, des bornes de collecte TerraCycle et organisé un vaste plan de communication 360° pour faire connaître le dispositif.

How implementing reuse systems can impact cities

By Tom Szaky December 10, 2021
Image via Iryna Inshyna on Shutterstock
Humankind itself doesn’t cause climate change. Rather, it’s the way it relates to nature. Indigenous practices, for example, have long sustained balance between human development and nature’s activities. However, on the road to industrialization, advancements that increased productivity disrupted that balance, including many linear (take-make-waste) practices that drive climate change. With the urbanization and the formation of cities, demands on these improved systems only increased. The breakthroughs in mass production, material sourcing and transportation that significantly and efficiently cut the time, money and human labor needed to produce and distribute goods allowed for wide and surged consumption of commodity items. This came to a head in the 1950s, when the appetite for convenience, lowered costs and a culture of consumerism really took off. When single-use and disposability (specifically of plastic, a synthetic material nature cannot absorb) exploded to enable fast-moving, on-the-go lifestyles, recycling and reintegration of material did not keep pace. As a result, about 8 billion tons of plastic have been produced since the 1950s, and more than 300 million tons are produced each year. At best, 9 percent of all plastic ever made has been recycled. The rest has been landfilled, incinerated or littered; these practices generate billions of tons of the greenhouse gases that cause climate change. Cities, with growing populations and demands on resources, exacerbate the waste crisis and may be a key focus area to help change course away. Cities occupy just 3 percent of the Earth’s surface but house more than half of the world’s population, consume over 75 percent of global resources, and generate 60 to 80 percent of human-induced greenhouse gas emissions. Urbanization is only increasing, with 70 percent of the global population expected to live in cities by 2050.  
Cities, with growing populations and demands on resources, exacerbate the waste crisis and may be a key focus area to help change course away.
With this, cities are also at the forefront of suffering from its scale. Waste management systems fail to meet need in developed and underdeveloped markets alike, overwhelmed by cost and insufficient infrastructure. Public health and safety are huge issues where this is especially lacking, contributing to the ongoing impacts on air, water, soil and overall quality of life for residents. Reuse and durability-based systems may provide unexplored pathways to address these challenges with positive economics; reuse systems are estimated to present a $10 billion business opportunity if only 20 percent of single-use packaging today were converted, creating jobs, cutting costs of managing waste and litter and driving value with new revenue streams. Where business goes, change tends to come, but strong support from city functions is essential to driving reuse forward. For example, the Tokyo Metro Government (TMG) was absolutely instrumental to the successful launches and expansions for our Loop reuse platform in Japan. Involved in promotion at the early stages, the city helped fund pilot testing and consumer surveys in our reusable bento lunch containers project. With their own commitments to circular economy and waste reduction targets, TMG aligns business with the environment, and is even attracted to the fact that our platform engages competing brands. Building upon the existing long-term relationship with TerraCycle Japan through recycling programs with municipalities and schools, the clear and consistent support from the start afforded credibility and footing for the platform in a new market. As the governor of the city of Tokyo stated in a recent press conference, "Large cities in developed countries such as Tokyo can make a significant impact on the global economy by playing a leading role," noting reuse was standard in the region for glass bottles for beer, sake and more just 30 years ago. Cities are complex ecosystems in themselves, so a "buy anywhere, return anywhere" ecosystem for reusables that makes it easy for consumers to access, businesses to sell and cities to benefit from is as much a feat of design as a reimagined container or durable package. This is a top priority for Loop as we expand to new markets and optimize our offerings. Today for grocery we have Aeon in Japan, Tesco in the United Kingdom, Carrefour in France and Walgreens and Kroger’s Fred Meyer banner coming soon in the United States, and the biggest names in QSR (quick service restaurant): McDonald’s was the first to pilot the model in select stores in the U.K., followed by Tim Horton’s in Canada, then Burger King in several countries in the coming months. With so much ground still to break (reuse exists today across the modern economy, but the models are incompatible — think beverages in Germany to propane tanks in the U.S.), recommendations and guardrails for cities can help minimize risk, maximize short-term returns and steer the way for scaled, widespread adoption and impact for reuse. Collaborative working frameworks for a fully implemented reuse system — this is the purpose of the World Economic Forum Consumers Beyond Waste (CBW) initiative’s community papers, released in conjunction with the World Economic Forum Sustainable Development Impact Summit during U.N. General Assembly week earlier this year.  
Cities have policy (regulation), infrastructure and procurement resources they can use to engage the public and incentivize actions that benefit reuse.
Featuring Design GuidelinesSafety Guidelines and The City Playbook, the documents offer a holistic view for reuse in different environments, and are authored by a variety of stakeholders for a less wasteful future. I am one of them, along with city officials, retailers and many more leaders from the public and private sector. Enabling manufacturers to produce reusables that can be sold at any retailer for a consumer to buy and return anywhere — safely, affordably and conveniently — in their local cities requires support from those cities. Cities have policy (regulation), infrastructure and procurement resources they can use to engage the public and incentivize actions that benefit reuse. It’s the consensus of the above papers that some of the greatest challenges cities face are funding, infrastructure and institutional barriers, so pushing initiatives through must include answering big questions about viability and benefit. Who is reuse good for, in the long and short term, and how do we protect our citizens and commerce during the learning periods? This is key for continued development of standards for cities that are socially equitable and environmentally positive, and help to align their activities with the global ecosystem.

TerraCycle and processor launch device collection services

Published: December 9, 2021 Updated: December 9, 2021 by 
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This summer, TerraCycle’s EasyPak program launched mail-in serialized data destruction and electronics recycling services for businesses. | Courtesy of TerraCycle

TerraCycle has launched collection programs that will feed businesses’ used electronics to Clean Earth for data destruction and recycling. Clean Earth also recently announced its own mail-in option. TerraCycle is a Trenton, N.J.-based company that recycles difficult-to-recycle materials. Its Regulated Waste division, which sprouted from the company’s 2017 acquisition of Chicago-based Air Cycle Corporation, has predominently recycled fluorescent bulbs and batteries, as well as some scrap electronics. This year, the Regulated Waste Division began pushing further into the electronics recycling space with the launch of mail-in and bulk-collection services providing certificates of data destruction and recycling that include the make, model and serial numbers of devices processed. In February, it launched its pallet-based BulkPak service. And around June, TerraCycle began marketing EasyPak, the company’s years-old mail-in service for electronics recycling, as a serialized service. TerraCycle launched a new ITAD website this summer. Joe Day, TerraCycle Regulated Waste’s director of business development, acknowledged the ITAD-related services provided aren’t unique to TerraCycle, “but it is something we thought was timely and relevant, just seeing how many data breaches are making headlines.” Employing an asset-light business model, TerraCycle collects, aggregates and ships recyclable materials – often on behalf of consumer product brand owners – but it doesn’t own or run the processing facilities itself. Instead, the company contracts with processors to recycle material on its behalf. TerraCycle’s main electronics recycling partner is Allentown, Pa.-based AERC Recycling Solutions, which was acquired in 2017 by Clean Earth. In 2019, specialty waste company Harsco Corporation acquired Clean Earth, which has R2-certified electronics processing facilities in Allentown, Pa.; Melbourne, Fla.; Modesto, Calif.; and Richmond, Va. Through the EasyPak program, organizations or individuals buy UPS-shipping-paid boxes and send computer equipment straight to a Clean Earth facility for processing, Day said. Clean Earth provides certificates of data destruction and recycling that list the make, model and serial numbers of each device processed. In an interview, Day, who started working for Air Cycle 20 years ago, noted the years-long and ongoing shift away from mercury-containing fluorescent lamps and toward the use of LED bulbs, which are not a regulated waste. That has put pressure on Air Cycle/TerraCycle to come up with different services to diversify the portfolio, leading the company to expand its core electronics recycling services, he said. Day noted that TerraCycle’s electronics program is still based on material being recycled, rather than refurbished and resold. But TerraCycle does provide a separate collection service that will pick up a large number of devices and will process them with an eye toward refurbishing and resale. In addition, as part of its expanding suite of services, TerraCycle is now supplying data-destruction equipment for customers that produce a large number of used drives. The company is selling the Destroy-It Hard Drive Punch, which punches a steel die through drives, and a line of degaussing products. TerraCycle Regulated Waste brings in roughly one-quarter of TerraCycle’s sales revenue. In 2020, Regulated Waste reported $6.1 million in sales, according to the company’s annual financial filing.

Programs targeted at remote workforces

Separately, Clean Earth on Dec. 7 announced its own mail-in recycling service, called AssetSure. Marketed for businesses, the AssetSure program sends prepaid shipping labels and packaging to customers so they can send their electronics to a Clean Earth facility for data destruction and recycling. Both TerraCycle and Clean Earth tied the mail-in services to the COVID-19-era need to securely recycle electronics used by employees working from home. “With an increase in remote work, there is an elevated risk for e-waste mismanagement,” David Stanton, president of Clean Earth, stated in the press release. “Our customers can feel confident knowing their expired IT assets will be handled in a responsible and compliant manner to protect their data, brand and our environment.” In a release, Kevin Flynn, global vice president of TerraCycle Operations and director of TerraCycle Regulated Waste, noted that IT departments in all industries are in need of dependable data sanitization. “The need to outfit workers with the latest remote-ready tech while reliably managing data on old devices and recycling them appropriately has exploded,” Flynn stated.

Four Ways to Recycle—or Reuse—All That Holiday Wrapping Paper

Experts say you can use those papers again, wrinkles and all. Sustainable gift-giving allows you to lower your environmental impact while helping your friends and family live more eco-friendly lives, but presenting piles of green gifts in conventional wrapping paper—which just ends up in the trash—sends a mixed message. "Traditional wrapping paper is often dyed, laminated, or made up of small, non-paper additives, such as glitter or plastics, which makes it a difficult item to recycle," says Shaye DiPasquale of TerraCycle North America. "While people usually have the best intentions when they place non-recyclable materials in the recycling, this can actually cause an entire bin of otherwise good recyclables to be contaminated and thus, renders the entirety of its content non-recyclable." Ahead, several ways to recycle—or, better yet, reuse—holiday gift wrap.

Follow the rules of recycling.

In the chaos of a holiday gift exchange, it's tempting to toss all the paper into your recycling bin and assume you've made the right choice, but not all towns and counties can handle all types of paper. "A good rule-of-thumb to remember is any wrapping paper that is velvety or metallic, has a texture, or contains glitter is not conventionally recyclable," says DiPasquale. "But 100-percent paper or lightly inked wrapping paper that has been stripped of any sticky tape, gift tags, ribbons and bows can sometimes be recycled by certain municipalities." It's essential to check with your recyclers to see what they accept before putting restricted papers into mixed recycling. "This is called 'wishcycling' and it can cause many problems," DiPasquale adds. "Waste stream contamination can slow, or even halt, operations at local recycling facilities as workers will have to hand sort out the un-recyclable materials. If the incompatible material is not sorted out, it can diminish the quality of the recycled end-product."
Another option: Fill one of TerraCycle's Zero Waste Boxes (from $93, zerowasteboxes.terracyle.com)—specially designated for gift wrap—with all your paper, bows, ribbons, garlands, confetti, and tissue paper, and send it back to the company, who will recycle it appropriately.

Reuse gift wrap—despite the wrinkles.

In general, reuse is a more environmentally friendly choice than recycling, so encouraging your family and friends to set aside their larger pieces of gift wrap for future use is a great idea. "We encourage this practice when possible!" says DiPasquale. "The more uses you can get out of the paper before it needs to be recycled, the better! While unwrapping gifts this year, try to open carefully and save what you can to reuse next year." Rebecca Burick, creative experience director at Paper Source, encourages the reuse of gift wrap by trimming off ripped edges and rolling the sheets around cardboard tubes for storage. "Most papers can be reused if they haven't been crunched into a ball," she says.
Choosing a thicker paper, or one with a busy pattern or texture, can also help: "Some papers are especially resilient and resist creasing and wrinkling, such as handmade crinkle paper from Thailand—it's fabric-like and already crinkled," Burick says. "Many Japanese fine papers, such as Yuzen and Chiyogami, also have a fabric-like quality that make them ideal for reuse. They also tend to have gold metallic accents, making them perfect for the holidays. Stone paper comes in continuous rolls and is also resistant to wrinkling and creasing." When wrapping, she recommends adding pleats to the paper to camouflage wrinkles, or creating a color-block aesthetic by using several smaller pieces of salvaged paper to wrap one larger gift.

Get creative with your scraps during and after the holidays.

If saving large pieces of gift wrap after your nieces' and nephews' frenzied opening isn't possible, Burick offers other ideas for reusing smaller pieces: Turn scraps into gift tags, envelopes, envelope liners, or paper bows, or, she says, "cut bands to wrap around your holiday cookie packaging." At TerraCycle, DiPasquale recommends giving used paper new life in several ways. "One of our favorite solutions for repurposing used wrapping paper is to shred or scrunch the paper into packing material that can be used to protect breakable items, like ornaments, when you are packing up your decorations at the end of the holiday season," she says. "There are also tons of great DIY crafts you can make from wrapping paper including using pieces of the paper in a scrapbook or as a part of a design for an upcycled holiday card next year."

Think outside the roll.

The type of paper you choose can also lower your environmental impact—the pretty vintage designs from Cavallini are an obvious choice for framing, either on their own or as part of a colorful gallery wall, says Burick. Buying recycled gift wrap is a sustainable alternative to conventional paper, says DiPasquale, and so is going beyond the gift-wrap selection at your local big box store. "You can purchase reusable fabric gift wrap or try Furoshiki, a traditional Japanese wrapping technique," says DiPasquale. "Old sheet music, maps, newspapers, or even scraps of fabric will give a cool vintage look to any package."

If your facility is downsizing, here’s how to recycle old electronics and office supplies

by Brianna Crandall — December 3, 2021 — As many U.S. office workers continue to work from home, many others are returning to very different office environments as they emerge from their quarantine bubbles. Economic-related personnel cuts or employees’ widespread adoption of remote or hybrid schedules has led to a sharp spike in office-related waste as workplaces are renovated to reflect changes in staff or to adhere to social distancing guidelines. Thankfully, just as innovative waste management company TerraCycle provided recycling solutions for the surplus of otherwise unrecyclable personal protective equipment (PPE) produced during the pandemic, the international recycling provider is back again with convenient solutions to address this new influx of unwanted office supplies, equipment and electronics.

Electronics

Whether a small company handling purchase orders and finances, a giant legal office dealing with sensitive lawsuits for high-profile clients, or a consumer trying to figure out what to do with their old home computer, all of these examples are united by the need for efficient and reliable information technology asset disposition (ITAD) and e-waste recycling solutions. In response, TerraCycle Regulated Waste (TCRW), a commercial recycling solution provider that specializes in the collection and repurposing of complex regulated waste streams, has launched a suite of products and services designed carry out the compliant and eco-friendly disposal of unwanted electronics while ensuring proper data destruction.
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EasyPak Electronics Recycling Container – Serialized. Image courtesy TerraCycle
Kevin Flynn, global vice president of TerraCycle Operations and director of TerraCycle Regulated Waste, stated:
Since the start of the pandemic and the trend of companies embracing work-from-home schedules, IT departments, no matter the size or the industry require some form of dependable data sanitization. The need to outfit workers with the latest remote-ready tech while reliably managing data on old devices and recycling them appropriately has exploded. In answer, TerraCycle Regulated Waste has created a robust suite of services that allow businesses and consumers alike to streamline their e-waste recycling requirements and ITAD needs with the type of turnkey recycling solutions that TerraCycle is known for.
The products and services are listed below.
  • E-Waste Mail Back Recycling: Available for purchase through Amazon, the EasyPak Electronics Recycling Container – Serialized and the EasyPak WFH & Workspace Electronics Recycling Container – Serialized were designed to offer a one-step solution to recycle any e-waste that can be powered-on or is home to a chip or board parts. This includes, but is not limited to, LEDS, computers, monitors, telecom gear, fax machines and televisions. These safe, convenient and data-secure methods for the recycling and disposition of electronics include a detailed report with make/model/serial numbers of the disposed of items that provides proof that they were securely recycled.
  • Bulk E-Waste Freight Recycling: The BulkPak E-waste Serialized Recycling Kit offers IT managers a turnkey effective solution for the recycling bulk quantities of e-waste that can be powered-on or is home to a chip or board parts, including CPU’s, monitors and e-scrap.
  • ITAD Machine Solutions: For individual purchase and utilized by TCRW to process the e-waste received in through the mail-back and freight solutions, TCRW offers two state-of-the-art systems that ensure that the data on the discarded electronic devices never fall into the wrong hands. They include:
    • Destroy-It Hard Drive PunchAt the touch of a button, the Destroy-It Hard Drive Punch makes discarded hard drives from PCs, laptops, notebooks, printers, copiers, and PDAs unreadable by punching a hardened steel die completely through the drive.
    • Degaussing Machine: To support the growing demand for user-friendly data erasure technology, TCRW now supplies high-speed and economical degaussing solutions.  This new line of degaussing products will provide your organization with the assurance that your media and data-bearing devices no longer contain any confidential information before being sent off site for recycling.
As an added incentive and level of security, TerraCycle Regulated Waste provides customers with a Certificate of Destruction to verify that the waste has been dismantled and all data storage components have been destroyed pursuant to all applicable laws including environmental and waste management regulations. Additionally, the destruction process will also ensure that all data equipment is destroyed and unusable in its original state. To learn about TerraCycle Regulated Waste and their ITAD solutions, visit the company’s new website.

Office supplies and equipment

As the United States turns a corner with the pandemic, workers are being asked to abandon their quarantine bubbles and return to the workplaces they left well over a year ago. However, many are returning to very different office environments as companies trash now unnecessary office equipment in response to either economic-related personnel cuts or employees’ widespread adoption of remote or hybrid schedules, as 44% of total U.S. workers are, according to Statista. Just as TerraCycle® provided innovative recycling solutions for the surplus of otherwise unrecyclable personal protective equipment (PPE) produced during the pandemic, the international recycling leader is back again with convenient solutions to address this new influx of unwanted office supplies. As office workers return to a downsized or modified workplace, TerraCycle’s Zero Waste Boxes provide a convenient recycling solution for nearly every conceivable piece of office waste generally not recyclable through most towns’ conventional recycling facilities. When placed in high-traffic areas like breakrooms or kitchens, Zero Waste Boxes provide “psychic income” to eco-minded employees and deliver an environmentally-friendly alternative to landfilling in the form of recycling — all while discouraging clutter throughout any newly renovated office, says the company. image.png
Office Separation Zero Waste Box. Image courtesy TerraCycle
To recycle common forms of unwanted office supplies, TerraCycle offers the following Zero Waste Boxes:
  • Office Supplies Zero Waste Box: To recycle tape dispensers, desk organizers, card and document filers, binders, calendars, labels, staplers, hole punchers, dividers, paper cutters, correction supplies, pens/pencils/markers, fasteners, paper clips, staples, binder clips and sticker and label sheet backing. Not a solution for e-waste like electronic staplers and label making machines.
  • Office Separation Zero Waste Box: To recycle art supplies, books and magazines, eye wear, cleaning accessories, fabrics and clothing, interior home furnishings, media storage, office supplies, paper packaging, pet products (non-food), plastic packaging, plastic cards and shipping materials.
  • Media Storage Zero Waste Box: To recycle any object or device capable of storing data (ie. audio, video) in analog or digital format including records, 8-track tapes, cassette tapes, CDs and DVDs, Blu Ray discs, floppy disks, memory sticks and external hard drives.
  • E-Waste Zero Waste Box: To recycle any household or office e-waste including home phones, cell phones, computer cables and accessories, keyboards, VCR/DVD players, hand-held computers, digital music players, pagers, radios, cameras, video recorders, TVs, laptops, desktop computers and monitors, printers and scanners, digital cameras, copiers, typewriters, fax machines, stereos, tuners and turntables and receivers and speakers.
When full, the boxes can be returned to TerraCycle for processing, and the collected waste will be cleaned, melted and remolded to make new products. TerraCycle, a global provider of solutions to collect and repurpose complex waste streams, created the Zero Waste Box program to provide solutions for difficult-to-recycle waste that cannot be recycled through TerraCycle’s brand-sponsored, national recycling programs or via standard municipal recycling. Tom Szaky, CEO and founder of TerraCycle, remarked:
No matter if you’re implementing a hybrid schedule or if you’re planning to return to the office in full force this fall, our workplaces will likely begin to look a lot different compared to how we left them. TerraCycle’s goal is to make this transition as easy and as environmentally friendly as possible by giving your business the power to divert waste from landfills through our turn-key Zero Waste recycling solutions.
TerraCycle works with major manufacturers and retailers to recycle products and packaging that would normally be thrown away. To learn more about TerraCycle and its innovative recycling solutions for electronics, office waste, fluorescent bulbs, medwaste and sharps and more, visit the company’s website or click on the product links above.