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ELIMINATING THE IDEA OF WASTE®

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Some Big Brands Are Turning to Reusable Containers to Reduce Plastic Waste

Big companies are testing a return to the “milkman model”—that is, addressing waste by shifting to reusable containers. Twenty-five of the world’s biggest brands said they will make the change this summer, including Procter & Gamble Co., Nestlé SA, PepsiCo Inc. and Unilever PLC, the Wall Street Journal reported. These companies will use glass, steel, and other reusable containers that can be returned and cleaned to be used again. The participating companies see it as a way to reduce waste—and there’s a lot of it. According to data reported by the Earth Day Network, 9.1 billion tons of plastic has been produced since the 1950s when it was first introduced, and most of it still exists in some form. “From a philosophical point of view, we have got to lean in and learn about this stuff,” Simon Lowden, the marketing head for PepsiCo’s snacks business told the Journal. “People talk about recyclability and reuse and say they’d like to be involved in helping the environment, so let’s see if it’s true.” Business leaders in Davos this week for the World Economic Forum also discussed the issue of plastic waste. A new shopping platform, called Loop announced at the forum on Thursday that it would start delivering products like shampoo and laundry detergent for manufacturers in reusable containers, doing away with the disposable plastic containers, The Associated Press reported. Brands partnering with Loop include Nestle, Procter & Gamble, PepsiCo, and others. “Our goal is that by 2030, all of our packaging will be reusable or recyclable,” Virginie Helias, the vice president, and chief sustainability officer at Procter & Gamble, told the AP. Loop will start its offer with 300 products, with plans to expand down the line. Products include Pantene shampoo, which would be delivered in an aluminum pump container, and Haagen-Dazs Ice Cream, which would come in a stainless steel tub. “We have invented a process whereby we deconstruct PET plastic and polyester fiber into it base ingredients and then repolymerize them back into virgin-quality plastic. A great example would be to take an old used polyester carpet or sweater and turn that into a water bottle for one of our many clients such as Coca Cola or Pepsi-Cola,” Daniel Solomita, Loop founder and CEO, said in a statement to Fortune. While the company could help decrease garbage waste, it would also mean more delivery trucks, according to Tom Szaky, the CEO of the recycling company TerraCycle, which is behind Loop. In 2016, transportation, including cars, trucks, commercial aircraft, and railroads represented 28% of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. Light-duty vehicles accounted for 60% of the total transportation-related emissions, followed by medium- and heavy-duty trucks at 23%.

TerraCycle promises 'future of consumption' with Loop reuse system

Dozens of major brands have partnered to launch this ambitious new packaging model in the U.S. and France. TerraCycle and Suez break down how it could change the waste equation in the coming decades. After years of quiet planning and rigorous testing, TerraCycle has unveiled what it believes will be a revolutionary change in packaging: Loop. Debuted at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland this week, the new shopping system is the first of its kind to offer hundreds of name brand products in reusable and refillable packaging. In addition, many products traditionally viewed as inefficient to process — pens, diapers, razor blades — will now be recycled for the first time in many areas. This builds on the New Jersey company's foundational business of finding value in what is considered unrecyclable — but on an entirely new level.
Designed to be more attractive and functional than common versions, these new goods will be available on a pilot basis in the U.S. and France, starting this spring. With the convenience of delivery and pick-up service via online ordering — and eventually at retail stores — Loop is being billed as a rare opportunity to wean consumers off single-use disposability. "The thesis of Loop is we want to bring about the future of consumption, and the tenet of that would be the idea that waste doesn't exist," said TerraCycle CEO Tom Szaky in an interview with Waste Dive.  
PepsiCo products for the French market
Credit: Loop
 

A new consumer culture?

Procter & Gamble and Nestlé (both founding investors) — along with PepsiCo, Unilever, Mars Petcare, The Clorox Company, The Body Shop, Coca-Cola European Partners, Mondelēz International and Danone — are among the initial partners that have designed new packaging for Loop. Achieving this level of participation from the companies behind so many household brands was seen as essential for consumer buy-in. According to Szaky, a key component is elevating the experience of reusable shopping (beyond its current niche version of bringing mason jars and cloth bags to a local bulk store) through added convenience and an element of "luxury." Prices are expected to be comparable to current options aside from a refundable deposit, and many containers are made from glass, stainless steel or durable plastic. Some, such as a new Häagen-Dazs container, will even keep products frozen or fresh for longer. As envisioned, this system will start out as a delivery/pick-up service — something Szaky has previously described as akin to the old "milkman" model. UPS will deliver the products in reusable shipping bags, and once consumers are done, transport the bags to a regional cleaning facility, where containers will be sanitized and products recycled. This is said to be the first time feminine care products and diapers will be recycled in France, and the first time for razor blades in the U.S. "There are some big firsts baked into Loop, and that's really using a lot of TerraCycle's original competency. If it's reasonable to recover and reasonable to reuse, then it must be reused, is the rule," said Szaky.
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The pilot program is expected to launch this spring in the Paris metro area and the New York City area – including parts of New Jersey and Pennsylvania. French retailer Carrefour has signed on as a partner, and a U.S. retailer is in the works. While the initial list of participating companies have had to make upfront investments in new packaging design (though on a limited scale to start), the ability to meet both consumer demands and sustainability targets is seen as worth the price of admission. A spokesperson for the French unit of Coca-Cola European Partner (CCEP) told Waste Dive it sees a way to expand existing refillable glass bottle sales and "bring this unique experience directly to consumers at home in line with a no waste vision and our sustainability strategy." Loop is considered a clear fit for CCEP's "This Is Forward" plan — part of Coca-Cola's broader "World Without Waste" initiative  to ensure all packaging is recyclable and fully recovered by 2025. Other major partners — including Procter & GambleNestléPepsiCoUnilever and Mondelēz International — have set their own future sustainability targets or made financial commitments to recycling initiatives in recent years. While these pledges have often been met with skepticism from major environmental groups, it's possible this Loop announcement may be perceived differently. Szaky noted that eight of the 10 companies on a 2018 Greenpeace list of the most commonly found brands in ocean clean-ups are Loop partners — a potential signal of their willingness to take more ownership over plastic pollution. Greenpeace itself is also participating in the Davos launch event.  
Preserve reusable dishware and refillable containers for U.S. market
Credit: Loop
 

A world without "garbage"

Loop might be an easier fit for regulatory trends in European countries that encourage more recycling (though it will be exempt from extended producer responsibility rules), but it could prove a greater shock to the U.S. system if scaled successfully. The most directly affected parties will be packaging manufacturers — glass, for instance, might see more demand, while single-use plastic demand could decline. The potential decrease in tonnage for both waste and recycling collections also raises questions of what Loop will mean for the U.S. waste and recycling industry itself. "I'd say at the very beginning, if I was working over at Republic or Waste Management or even Waste Connections (Waste Connections owns a quarter of our Canadian company) I think they wouldn't even see this as a threat because it would seem super small compared to what is in the dumpster," said Szaky. "The real question is 10, 20, 30 years from now, if durable, reusable, repairable, that type of movement really hits scale — and I think Loop could be one of the vehicles that accomplish that — then you may see an effect on the loads, and unless you get involved in that, then you would see it competitively." Last year, Waste Connections CEO Ron Mittelstaedt told Waste Dive he believes "reuse is the pathway that will help diversion by non-generation" in future decades, although he didn't directly mention TerraCycle. No U.S. waste and recycling industry companies have invested in Loop to date. Suez, the France multinational that has a stake in TerraCycle's European operations, invested 4% in Loop. The company also partnered with Procter & Gamble and TerraCycle to launch a shampoo bottle made of ocean plastic at Davos in 2017. Jean-Marc Boursier, senior executive vice president of recycling and recovery at Suez's Northern Europe division, feels the concept fits into his company's view that increasing waste volumes can't be the primary corporate growth metric. According to Boursier, rising GDP, industrial activity and population growth should all be considered signs of a healthy economy — but that doesn't necessarily have to translate to more waste. "The question is, can we optimize waste production, and do we need to still dump everything into a very large landfill?" said Boursier, referring to the U.S. market. "Or, shall we consider waste as not only a nuisance, but as a product that we could transform into something more valuable?" Boursier declined to offer any direct advice on how U.S. service providers that still derive a significant portion of their revenue from landfills could adapt to such a model. Speaking about companies in general, he offered this outlook: "Either you enter — if you have an industrial company — into this world of circular economy with a negative view, where you believe that it is a constraint and it might have some increased costs at first glance. In which case you will be very reluctant to change the world — and we need to change our way if we are going to protect the planet," he said. "Or you take the lead and you try to differentiate yourself positively." Boursier sees Loop as a way for big brands to do that, adding that while it's too soon to know the full potential, "I believe it can change the world."  
TerraCycle headquarters in Trenton, New Jersey
Credit: TerraCycle
 

Next steps

After the first two pilots launch this spring, Loop is expected to expand into the London area in late 2019 with retailer Tesco. Toronto, California and Tokyo — in conjunction with the 2020 Summer Olympics — are on tap for next year. According to Bloomberg, the company has invested an estimated $10 million in this concept. Asked how he sees this growing as part of TerraCycle's business, Szaky noted that the timeframe might be long, but the change will be apparent when the company's market share in a given area shifts away recycling disposable products to durable ones. Based on life-cycle assessments, consumers will need to reorder products upward of five times for the environmental effects to even out. Watching how many repeat participants Loop can attract, and at what scale, will be key to tracking its progress. In the meantime, Szaky is also still looking for acquisition opportunities in specialized waste streams — such as the 2018 purchase of light bulb recycler Air Cycle — and remains open to a scenario in which TerraCycle's core business of recycling challenging materials shrinks as Loop grows. When asked if the long-term plan was to still file for an IPO once the company approached $70 million in revenue, Szaky replied: "It absolutely is, and Loop just helps us get there faster."

Volta às aulas traz lições de consumo consciente

As férias estão acabando e muitas famílias se preparam para comprar material escolar, além de novos uniformes, livros, apostilas, mochilas, calçados… E o que é feito com todos esses itens usados? Ficam encostados no armário ou vão para o lixo, gerando mais volume nos aterros?Várias dicas podem contribuir para que todo o material seja aproveitado ao máximo e resultando em mínimo de resíduos.

RWM confirms Tom Szaky as keynote speaker

RWM has confirmed Tom Szaky, the founder of TerraCycle, will be leading a keynote seminar at the event this year. Szaky is the latest addition to the history of keynote speakers that have led seminars at RWM, including the likes of Coca-Cola European Partners and Costa Coffee. Established in 2001, TerraCycle is a world leader in the collection and reuse of non-recyclable post-consumer waste which would otherwise be destined for landfill or incineration. It repurposes that waste into new eco-friendly materials and products. The waste is collected through TerraCycle’s National recycling programmes, which are free fundraisers that pay schools, charities and non-profits for every piece of waste they collect and return. TerraCycle also forms working partnerships with global brands to promote and ensure a circular economy. This includes numerous high profile recent UK partnerships in October of 2018 with the likes of Walkers (Pepsico), Pringles (Kellogg’s), Mars Petcare, Colgate and Acuvue to name but a few. "There is real momentum in the UK in terms of recycling, sustainability and the circular economy so I am delighted to be speaking at RWM 2019. My keynote presentation will look at how TerraCycle is working towards Eliminating the Idea of Waste,” said Szaky CEO and Founder of TerraCycle. “By forming partnerships with leading brands and developing circular economy practices, TerraCycle makes the non-recyclable, recyclable. Plus why society needs to move from disposable to durable / reusable and TerraCycle's groundbreaking work in this area." Nick Woore, Managing Director of RWM added: “Tom Szaky is currently changing the game with the work TerraCycle do. If you’re aware of his work then this keynote should be high on your agenda, and if you don’t know who Tom is, then use this opportunity to get to know one of the finest pioneers in the waste industry today”

Late July Snacks announces recycling partnership with TerraCycle

Late July Snacks has expanded their partnership with international recycling company TerraCycle to offer consumers a free, easy way to recycle packaging from their entire product line of snacks.   “Based on the huge success of the recycling envelope program we offered through TerraCycle, we’re thrilled to expand into a free recycling program that will give consumers nationwide the opportunity to recycle even more Late July snack packaging,” said Theresa Miller, director, Late July. “Since our inception in 2003, our mission has been to provide consumers with organic, non-GMO snacks that the whole family will love. Through our new partnership with TerraCycle, we can add national recyclability to our promise.”   Through the Late July Recycling Program, consumers can send in their empty snack packaging to be recycled for free. Participation is easy: sign up on the TerraCycle program page and mail in the packaging using a prepaid shipping label. Once collected, the packaging is cleaned and melted into hard plastic that can be remolded to make new recycled products. Additionally, for every two pounds of waste shipped to TerraCycle, collectors can earn $1 to donate to a non-profit, school or charitable organization of their choice.   “Thanks to companies like Late July, consumers can enjoy their favorite snacks while being rewarded for doing the right thing,” said TerraCycle CEO Tom Szaky. “Through the expansion of the program, consumers have an opportunity to divert even more packaging from landfills, as well as provide material for the manufacture of new products.”   The Late July Recycling Program is open to any interested individual, school, office, or community organization. For more information on TerraCycle’s recycling program, visit www.terracycle.com.

Dog rescue wins national recycling contest

The Boston Terrier Rescue Canada is kind to dogs… and the environment! Congrats to this organization for winning the 2018 “Recycling Revolution” contest.

  Last year, the Hain Celestial “Recycling Revolution” contest was launched as a way to motivate organizations, schools, families and individuals across Canada to reduce their environmental footprint. They were invited to participate in one of five free recycling programs, competing with other entrants by collecting recyclable packaging from various participating companies. The winner? A dog rescue!   Boston Terrier Rescue Canada (BTRC) collected the most pieces of flexible food packaging waste during the contest period. They won a bench made from recycled materials, as well as $300 in TerraCycle points that are redeemable for cash payment to their organization.   “Boston Terrier Rescue Canada loves collecting items for TerraCycle Canada’s various recycling programs,” says volunteer Patti Johnson. “Since our volunteers are spread across Canada, this type of fundraiser allows them to participate no matter where they live. It’s an awesome bonus that we get to help the environment while raising funds for BTRC.”  

How a Zero Waste Lifestyle Can Save You Money

Could you fit all the trash you generate each year into a single mason jar? Although it might sound impossible, it’s a feat attained by regular people across the country who are joining the zero waste movement.   Zero waste practitioners seek to get their net trash output to zero. Some even take to social media to tout fitting all their trash for an entire year into a small mason jar. While most people won’t be able or willing to reduce their total household trash to such a tiny amount, adopting a few zero waste principles can have a big impact on both your ecological footprint and your household budget.  

What Is Zero Waste?

“Zero waste” describes a lifestyle whose proponents aim to send absolutely no waste to a landfill, incinerator, or the ocean. Instead, they focus on finding ways to recycle, reuse, or refuse items. The concept is often considered part of the larger cradle-to-cradle manufacturing movement. A cradle-to-cradle material or product is recycled into a new product at the end of its life so that there is no waste. In contrast, most traditional manufacturing is considered cradle-to-grave, a linear model wherein a raw material is extracted from the earth, manufactured into a product that’s sold to consumers, and then disposed of in a landfill when it breaks, is used up, or once the consumer no longer wants or needs the product.   However, with global temperatures on the rise, extreme weather events, the ever-increasing size of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, and an alarming report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, many people aren’t waiting on manufacturing practices to change. Instead, they’re taking things into their own hands, seeking to reduce their resource consumption, purchase items secondhand, reuse products, and get their net trash output to zero — or as close to zero as they can.  

The Zero Waste Movement

The zero waste movement has been rapidly gaining popularity over the past decade, and most zero waste bloggers and lifestyle experts point to Bea Johnson as the mother of the movement. Johnson, who started the blog Zero Waste Home in 2008 chronicling her family’s zero waste journey, is one of the movement’s most famous spokespeople. When she launched her quest, most people had never heard the term “zero waste” as it was mainly used in government documents and by manufacturing companies.   Due to a combination of factors, from the 2008 financial crisis to the increase of extreme weather events like Hurricane Sandy, people were poised to take matters into their own hands and reduce their household waste and expenditures. Today, zero waste is no longer a quirky habit practiced only by hippies with compost piles in their backyards; it’s a movement that doesn’t show any sign of slowing down.   The Environmental Protection Agency estimates that Americans generate about 262 million tons of trash each year, over half of which goes to a landfill. This averages to about 4.5 pounds of trash per person in this country of 330 million, every single day. By contrast, in 1960, the average person generated 2.68 pounds of waste per day. The United States is home to only about 4% of the world’s population but produces almost 30% of its waste. It’s no wonder people are trying to reduce the amount of trash they’re personally responsible for generating.  

How You Can Work Toward Zero Waste

In addition to saving precious and non-renewable resources, pursuing a zero waste lifestyle can save you time and money. Johnson, for example, estimates that going zero waste helped reduce her family’s household costs by 40%, which was a welcome bonus when they started their quest in the depths of the Great Recession. Buying less and taking care of the things you already own so that they last longer can save you money both in the short and long run.   How can you work toward zero waste in your life? Most zero waste proponents recommend following five key tenets, in order of priority: refuse, reduce, reuse, recycle, and rot.       This one is easy: Simply refuse any items you don’t need, and don’t bring them into your house. That includes anything a person or company tries to give away for free, such as:  
  • A promotional tote bag from a work conference
  • A free pen from your bank
  • A plastic bobble head figure from the local ballpark family night
  • The plastic utensils, straws, and paper napkins that come with your takeout order
  At first, you may be tempted to accept such things just because they’re free and it’s hard for a budget-conscious person to pass up the lure of free stuff. However, anyone who has taken an introductory economics class knows the maxim “There ain’t no such thing as a free lunch.” In other words, nothing is truly free; someone, somewhere pays for the cost of an item, and that cost is usually eventually passed onto the consumer.   In terms of zero waste, a free item isn’t actually free because there’s an environmental cost associated with manufacturing and distributing it. It’s also likely the item will end up in a landfill at some point. Refusing free items, especially promotional items offered by a company or organization, also sends the message that customers don’t want cheap doodads, and thus the company should rethink buying and distributing them and instead find other ways to incentivize and thank customers.   If you want to go one step further, when a company offers you a free item, let them know you don’t want them to spend their marketing budget on unnecessary stuff, but would rather see them put those funds toward their corporate environmental initiatives or a recycling program.         This is one of the zero waste tenets that will probably save you the most money, especially at the outset. It’s also pretty self-explanatory: Reduce the number of things you buy and consume.   Every time you consider buying something new — from clothing to electronics to home accessories — ask yourself if you really, truly need it. Most of the time, the answer will be no. You’ll likely be surprised by the sheer number of stuff you stop buying once you start to question every purchase you make.   You can also work to reduce the things you do need by changing some of your practices. If you’re in the habit of buying potato chips in pre-portioned, individual packages for convenience, consider buying one bag and portioning it out yourself as needed — or give up eating chips altogether. Reduce your reliance on single-use items, such as disposable plastic razors, plastic water bottles, and individual yogurt cups.   From a budget perspective, single-use and small-portion items are usually more expensive than their reusable and bulk counterparts. A reusable bottle and distilled water from homeare virtually free, whereas Americans pay an estimated 2,000% markup on bottled water, which is the same thing. Retailers know they can charge a premium for convenience, so by reducing how often you buy these items — or eliminating them altogether — you save money as well as the environment. For an incentive beyond your budget, keep in mind that single-use items account for almost 90% of the plastic in the oceans.   You can also reduce the amount of paper you use. Instead of printing a boarding pass every time you fly, download the airline’s app and use an electronic pass. Don’t print out a paper coupon or concert ticket, but instead store it digitally on your smartphone. Ask that receipts and documents be sent to you electronically instead of printed, and store manuals, prescriptions, and instructions digitally rather than printing them out. This will both reduce the amount of paper you use and obviate the need to have a printer at home, which gives you one less thing to store, care for, and eventually replace.   Instead of buying disposable paper or plastic plates, cups, and cutlery and plastic baggies and single-use storage cartons, switch to reusable items. If you host parties and cookouts a few times a year, investing in some reusable melamine plates or other non-breakable dishes will reduce your trash output and the number of items you need to buy in preparation for these events. When storing food, choose containers you can use over and over again, such as glass baking dishes and beeswax-coated food wrap.   Switch to reusable canvas grocery bags or use the plastic single-use bags you probably have an enormous collection of under your sink or in your pantry. You can also use these as trash can liners instead of buying plastic trash bags at the store. For every item you buy regularly, ask yourself if there’s a reusable version you can buy just one time or fashion a version from something you already own instead.   Finally, reduce the amount of energy you use. Set your home’s thermostat lower in the winter. Practice meal planning to reduce your grocery bill and food waste. Anything you can do to reduce the resources you consume will help you work toward zero waste and save you money.         Reuse everything you can, for as long as you can, in all the ways that you can. This category can be fun as it helps you stretch your imagination — who doesn’t love the treasure hunt aspect of secondhand shopping?   For example, if one of your favorite cotton t-shirts gets a hole in it, pull out a needle and thread and repair it instead of tossing it in the donate pile. If you don’t know how to sew, find an online tutorial to teach you. This simple fix can get you a few more years of wear out of the garment and keep you from spending money on a replacement.   If the shirt eventually wears out to the point that it’s no longer worth fixing, cut it into squares and use them for cleaning and multi-purpose rags instead of relying on disposable paper towels. This will save you money at the grocery store and save a tree. The National Resources Defense Council estimates that 500,000 acres of arboreal forest are cut down every year for pulp to make disposable products. What’s more, the plastic packaging from a pack of paper towels ultimately winds up in a landfill. Finally, once you’ve used the shirt to the point that it’s just a few shreds of cotton, you can compost it (more on that coming up).   Think about how many single-use items are based on reusable versions that our grandparents used. There was no such thing as a disposable razor or single-use plastic pen during the Great Depression. Look at the disposable items you use each day and ask yourself which reusable versions you could use instead. Instead of getting a disposable cup each time you visit a coffee shop, bring your travel coffee mug when you’re on the go. Stop buying boxes of tissues and instead use a handkerchief or square of old T-shirt to wipe your nose.   When you apply the reuse principle to everything you own, you’ll be surprised by how many things you can reuse instead of buying them new. From reusing coffee grounds to giving a second life to items like pasta sauce jars, get creative and see how long, and in how many ways, you can make something last. Every time you go to throw away an item, ask yourself how you can reuse it instead. If you need inspiration, turn to the Internet, which has a plethora of zero waste blogsdiscussion boards, and communities of people seeking to decrease their environmental impact and monthly budget.         Once something has truly reached the end of its life, you can then recycle it. In addition to setting things like plastic milk jugs and paper bags out on the curb for pickup every week, recycling also means figuring out how to properly dispose of things you can no longer use. There are a number of ways to responsibly dispose of hard-to-recycle items, including finding a local organization such as a Habitat for Humanity ReStore to take your old household appliances to, searching the Earth911 database to find a recycling center near you, and sending Brita filters and alkaline batteries to TerraCycle to be responsibly recycled.   If you’re getting rid of something you no longer need that’s still perfectly good, you can also recycle it by sending it into the secondhand economy so someone else can use it. Do this by listing it for sale or giving it away for free on sites such as Craigslist or apps such as Letgo. Put an ad on your apartment building bulletin board or ask your friends and neighbors if they need or want it. Doing so could help you earn a little money and will keep the item from heading to the landfill or getting recycled while it’s still perfectly usable.   If you’re wondering why “recycle” is so far down the zero waste list, it’s because simply tossing an item in the recycling bin doesn’t guarantee a happy ending. In fact, by some estimates, almost 25% of the things an average consumer puts out with their municipal recycling actually ends up in the landfill for several reasons.   Customers don’t always know what can and can’t be recycled. If they throw something in their recycling bin that can’t be processed, that item can actually contaminate the entire recycling batch, which means the whole thing has to be sent to the landfill instead. Dirty or food-soiled containers also can’t be recycled, so if you don’t wash out a tomato sauce jar, or you throw a cheesy, grease-soaked pizza box into the bin and hope for the best, those items have to be painstakingly pulled out of the stream either by municipal workers or at the recycling facility.   Finally, in the past, much of our recyclables were shipped to China instead of being processed in the United States. But ever since China banned the import of many types of plastic and paper in January 2018, recyclers and waste management companies have had literal tons of recyclable materials on their hands and nowhere to send it. In many cases, it’s more cost-effective to send this stuff to the landfill than recycle it.   There are also a number of materials that can only be recycled once, or downcycled. Plastic especially, due to the nature of its molecular makeup, can often only be melted down and re-formed once, often in the form of other lower-quality plastic items like plastic lumber and insulation materials. These second-generation plastic items, once they break down or are no longer wanted, are then sent to the landfill.   In all cases, choosing reusable containers and reducing the need for single-use plastic items is better than absolving your conscience by throwing them in the recycling bin.       The final tenet of zero waste is rot, another way of saying “compost.” If you’re new to composting, it’s the aerobic method by which organic waste breaks down. Most of us probably learned about the breakdown of organic matter way back in elementary school when we buried both a banana peel and a plastic bag in the ground and then dug them up six weeks later to see what had happened. The banana peel, aided by bacteria and oxygen in the soil, began to turn into dirt, whereas the plastic bag just got dirty.   Why bother composting when you can just throw food waste into the garbage and let it compost in the landfill? You may be surprised to learn that most items destined for the landfill don’t actually decompose. Landfills are lined with non-porous materials, such as plastic and clay, to contain trash and keep it from leaking into the ground below. This keeps everything in the landfill quarantined from soil and air, both of which are essential to composting. Landfills also mix everything into one big pile, instead of separating things that will turn back into dirt, such as banana peels, and things that never will, such as plastic.   For these reasons and more, avid zero waste followers compost everything that can’t be refused, reused, or recycled, either by starting a compost pile in their backyard, setting up vermicomposting in their kitchen, or finding a community garden where they can compost their kitchen scraps and plant cuttings. I live in a high-rise apartment building with no outdoor space and don’t have the kitchen capacity to host 30,000 worms, so I found a local nursery with a small composting setup to send my scraps to instead. The high-quality dirt that composting creates is an added benefit of keeping this organic matter out of the landfill; it’s better than any plastic bag of potting soil you buy at the store, and it’s free.  

Pitfalls to Avoid

If you’re ready to jump on the zero waste bandwagon, there are a few things to keep in mind as you embrace this lifestyle.  

1. You Don’t Have to Buy Anything New

You don’t need to buy special items in your quest toward fewer throwaway items and less packaging. Many zero waste bloggers post pictures of their reusable metal straws, fancy mesh produce bags, and beautiful Le Parfait storage containers, but you can simply opt out of using plastic straws and transport produce from the grocery store in any cloth or vinyl tote bag you already have. Instead of investing in a brand-new set of matching glass containers, re-use old pasta sauce and spice jars to store bulk food items, or pick up some canning jars from your local Goodwill for pennies.  

2. Don’t Toss Things You Already Own

  You also don’t have to buy fancy new eco-friendly shampoo or toss out all the cleaning products currently under your bathroom sink. An important part of zero waste is using what you already have instead of being lured by the siren song of something new. It can be tempting to want to buy a pretty new stainless steel travel mug for your daily coffee, but the free reusable mug you got from your last work event or public radio station donation works just as well.  

3. Progress Is Better Than Perfection

  Figuring out what to do with all the stuff you already have can get exhausting. If you find yourself overwhelmed with questions about how to reuse or responsibly dispose of something, don’t despair. The zero waste lifestyle isn’t a competition; if you never get your family’s yearly trash output to fit into a mason jar, you won’t be kicked out of the movement. Any step you can take is better — both for the environment and for your budget — than doing nothing at all.   Set a goal for yourself or your family, and make it a fun competition instead of yet another chore. If you hit your target, reward yourself with something that’s not a physical item, like a fun family activity, an ice cream outing, or dinner at a favorite restaurant.  

Final Word

  There are a number of resources that can help you on your quest toward zero waste, such as local “Buy Nothing” groups, the Freecycle Network, and zero waste bloggers. Learn to love shopping secondhand, embrace the sharing economy, and think creatively about the items in your house, and you’ll be well on your way toward lessening your environmental impact and increasing your savings.   Do you practice any zero waste principles? Do you think you could you ever get your family’s trash output down to one mason jar per year?  

ANCHORAGE MUSICIANS CAN TRADE IN OLD STRINGS FOR NEW AT UPCOMING EVENT

Local musicians are invited to attend a free recycle and restring workshop led by musician Jared Woods at The Horn Doctor Music Store, Inc. in Anchorage, Alaska on Monday, January 21st at 12:00 PM or 5:30 PM. Since space is limited, those interested are encouraged to reserve a spot in either workshop session by calling 907-272-4676. Sponsored by D’Addario, musicians can bring any old instrument strings for recycling and get their electric or acoustic guitars restrung with D’Addario NYXL or Nickel Bronze Acoustic strings. Old strings collected during the event will be recycled through Playback, D’Addario’s free, national recycling program. Since 1984, The Horn Doctor Music Store, Inc., a family owned and operated establishment, has been dedicated to serving Anchorage musicians. Founded by experienced instrument technician John Kagerer, the business prides itself on providing full service for every customer’s musical need. Throughout the generations, the store’s knowledgeable and friendly staff have faithfully pursued their mission of helping local musicians achieve their dreams. In 2019, the Kagerers are excited to host the very first D’Addario restring event in the state of Alaska.
Playback is the world’s first instrument string recycling program, launched through a partnership between D’Addario and international recycling company TerraCycle. The program is a part of D’Addario’s Players Circle loyalty program and allows registered users to recycle their used strings in exchange for extra Players Circle points. Musicians attending the recycle and restring events will receive a code at the event, redeemable for extra Players Circle points. Points can be used towards merchandise or donated to the D’Addario Foundation, the company’s nonprofit organization supporting music education in underserved communities. “We’ve always felt that the replacement of instrument strings were a waste in an otherwise environmentally-friendly industry so it’s great that D’Addario and TerraCycle are helping dealers confront this issue” says store owner Barbara Kagerer. “Recycling these strings, regardless of brand-name, will greatly minimize our store’s landfill contribution.” D’Addario has been consistently committed to the environment, working to reduce their company’s packaging waste and use the most environmentally responsible packaging available on the market. Their partnership with TerraCycle allows them to further reinforce their role as an environmental leader in the music industry. TerraCycle is a global leader in recycling typically non-recyclable waste, working with companies to implement recycling initiatives and finding solutions for materials otherwise destined for landfill. Musicians interested in recycling through Playback can visit http://www.daddario.com/playback. For more information on the recycle and restring event, please contact The Horn Doctor Music Store at (907) 272-4676.

ANCHORAGE MUSICIANS CAN TRADE IN OLD STRINGS FOR NEW AT UPCOMING EVENT

Local musicians are invited to attend a free recycle and restring workshop led by musician Jared Woods at The Horn Doctor Music Store, Inc. in Anchorage, Alaska on Monday, January 21st at 12:00 PM or 5:30 PM. Since space is limited, those interested are encouraged to reserve a spot in either workshop session by calling 907-272-4676. Sponsored by D’Addario, musicians can bring any old instrument strings for recycling and get their electric or acoustic guitars restrung with D’Addario NYXL or Nickel Bronze Acoustic strings. Old strings collected during the event will be recycled through Playback, D’Addario’s free, national recycling program. Since 1984, The Horn Doctor Music Store, Inc., a family owned and operated establishment, has been dedicated to serving Anchorage musicians. Founded by experienced instrument technician John Kagerer, the business prides itself on providing full service for every customer’s musical need. Throughout the generations, the store’s knowledgeable and friendly staff have faithfully pursued their mission of helping local musicians achieve their dreams. In 2019, the Kagerers are excited to host the very first D’Addario restring event in the state of Alaska.
Playback is the world’s first instrument string recycling program, launched through a partnership between D’Addario and international recycling company TerraCycle. The program is a part of D’Addario’s Players Circle loyalty program and allows registered users to recycle their used strings in exchange for extra Players Circle points. Musicians attending the recycle and restring events will receive a code at the event, redeemable for extra Players Circle points. Points can be used towards merchandise or donated to the D’Addario Foundation, the company’s nonprofit organization supporting music education in underserved communities. “We’ve always felt that the replacement of instrument strings were a waste in an otherwise environmentally-friendly industry so it’s great that D’Addario and TerraCycle are helping dealers confront this issue” says store owner Barbara Kagerer. “Recycling these strings, regardless of brand-name, will greatly minimize our store’s landfill contribution.” D’Addario has been consistently committed to the environment, working to reduce their company’s packaging waste and use the most environmentally responsible packaging available on the market. Their partnership with TerraCycle allows them to further reinforce their role as an environmental leader in the music industry. TerraCycle is a global leader in recycling typically non-recyclable waste, working with companies to implement recycling initiatives and finding solutions for materials otherwise destined for landfill. Musicians interested in recycling through Playback can visit http://www.daddario.com/playback. For more information on the recycle and restring event, please contact The Horn Doctor Music Store at (907) 272-4676.