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THE RECENTLY RELEASED TERRACYCLE CENTRIFUGE TUBES & RIGID LAB PLASTICS ZERO WASTE BOX

A private corporation provides a scalable recycling solution for common laboratory plastics

The scale and rapid pace of biomedical research being conducted today is built upon single-use plastics that are critical for all aspects of research including sample collection, processing, and storage. Since the introduction of plastic centrifuge tubes, conical tubes, chemical packaging, etc. (the list seemingly goes on forever), scientists have re-directed their limited and precious time from sterilization of reusable laboratory materials to collecting more samples and performing more experiments. Indeed, many laboratory plastics do come in contact with hazardous waste and therefore, need to be disposed of properly. However, what happens to plastics that contact non-hazardous chemical solutions? Plastics often contain a resin identification code that identifies what type of resin was used to make the product. This code can be used to facilitate the proper recycling of each plastic item. Many laboratory plastics are not conventionally recycled. This may be why centrifuge tubes and most conical tubes are not labeled with a resin identification code. This represents a technical hurdle but that does not mean that laboratory plastics are impossible to recycle. As a research community, we toss unimaginable amounts of these plastic products into the waste bin each year – partially because there are not enough local waste diversion opportunities. A 2015 Nature correspondence from the University of Exeter estimated that research labs contribute 5.5 million tons of plastic to waste streams each year, equal to 1.7% of the total global plastic production (Urbina, Watts, & Reardon, 2015). In response to this issue, TerraCycle, named a 100 Fastest-Growing Inner City Businesses by Fortune and one of Time’s 100 Most Influential Companies, has launched their Centrifuge Tubes & Rigid Lab Plastics Zero Waste Box. Please enjoy an interview with Alex Payne, a publicist at TerraCycle, who shared the behind-the-scenes details that led to the product launch, how to properly use the box and TerraCycle’s ambitious plans for reducing laboratory waste in the future. Check out the box here!

Interview with Alex Payne, TerraCycle Publicist

How was the idea of the Centrifuge Tubes & Rigid Lab Plastics Zero Waste Box conceptualized at TerraCycle? This was a mix of consumer demand but also an internal idea. We had customers asking if they could recycle their clean lab plastics and we were referring them to our Plastic Packaging Box but realized that naming a box specifically for rigid plastics would be beneficial and more intuitive for customers shopping our site.  What materials are accepted in this Zero Waste Box? How did TerraCycle decide on these accepted materials vs. other laboratory plastics? Was there an orientation towards plastics that are notoriously difficult to recycle and/or wasteful to landfill? The Centrifuge Tubes & Rigid Lab Plastics Zero Waste Box accepts any brand and type of clean and non-hazardous rigid lab plastics including centrifuge tubes, plastic bottles, trays, vials, and beakers. As with many of TerraCycle’s solutions, the Centrifuge Tubes & Rigid Lab Plastics Zero Waste Box was created to provide collectors with a convenient, turn-key answer to hard-to-recycle plastics that are otherwise not recycled throughout the United States. Can the tubes and rigid lab plastics be refashioned into new products for research scientists?  Typically, not.  We are not recycling these materials into high quality food grade feedstocks, which would be needed for new manufacturing into products for lab settings.  We typically process these materials into a format suitable for compression molded applications that are more forgiving, like plastic shipping pallets, outdoor furniture, etc. How exactly are the accepted materials recycled?  The rigid lab plastics collected through the Centrifuge Tubes & Rigid Lab Plastics Zero Waste Box are separated by resin code or material type, melted down, and turned into pellets that can be molded and extruded to produce new products. Is TerraCycle able to offer this recycling program on an institution/campus-wide scale?  Yes.  Will this program be available as a pallet in the future?  Yes.  How does TerraCycle deal with the possible contamination of these materials at its recycling facility? Any item or material that TerraCycle can recycle but should not be collected in the box (i.e. a nitrile glove in the Centrifuge Tubes & Rigid Lab Plastics box) is considered contamination. When this occurs, the item will be removed and recycled appropriately and TerraCycle will notify the customer and remind them to only include the accepted materials described for that box. Non-compliant items (materials that TerraCycle does not accept at all) are removed if possible and disposed of appropriately. In these instances, TerraCycle will also notify the customer.   What are TerraCycle’s long-term goals for eliminating waste in the scientific research field? TerraCycle’s overarching goal has always been to eliminate the idea of waste and that means providing solutions across every waste-producing industry – including laboratories and research organizations that produce millions of nonhazardous lab disposables every year. While waste streams like personal protective equipment and lab gear are not visible to the general public, they are essential since they allow scientific research to be conducted safely and efficiently. TerraCycle supports the collection and recycling of these indispensable but unsung waste heroes in order to keep as much of the material out of landfills and in-use. Urbina, M. A., Watts, A. J. R., & Reardon, E. E. (2015). Labs should cut plastic waste too. Nature, 528(7583), 479-479. doi:10.1038/528479c

Café com ESG: Conteúdos diários que transformam | 31/05

O conceito de lixo zero vem ganhando adesão de empresas ao gerar valor econômico. Pesquisas recentes mostraram que a chamada geração Z, formada pelos nascidos após 2000, está disposta a pagar mais por marcas sustentáveis, o que tem levado os fabricantes a ampliar investimentos em coleta seletiva de resíduos e em reciclagem de produtos. O Brasil, entretanto, está longe de atingir patamar desejável em ambos os quesitos.

O cidadão como protagonista no processo de consumo sustentável, artigo de Renata Ross

O cidadão comum assiste a debates, como os da Cúpula de Líderes do Clima, na condição de plateia, sem se dar conta que também é protagonista. É comum nos sentirmos impotentes quando nos deparamos com problemáticas grandes e complexas: como resolver o buraco da Camada de Ozônio? Como despoluir os oceanos? Questões grandiosas e de grande impacto costumam nos paralisar, pois frequentemente nos sentimos muito pequenos para lidar com assuntos tão sérios. Por isso, a melhor maneira de se fazer algo é olhando ao redor para buscar entender como, enquanto indivíduo, dar a sua contribuição. Dê o primeiro passo, mude a rota com pequenas ações.

It’s Past Time to Start “Talking Trash!”

Ruminations From the Rock and Beyond | May 27, 2021 Jory Westberry I’m doing a lot more walking now that we have a new rescue pup and am appalled at the number of cigarette butts along the sidewalks and roadsides and on the ground in parks and playgrounds. Not to mention our beaches! Do you really think that putting your tainted, crusty butt in the sand to dispose of it makes it go away? Hardly, another family with little children will unearth it and the mom or dad will scream, “Don’t touch that”, or the butt will ride the currents for years, or some species will decide it’s food and swallow it.   While waiting at the intersection for your light to turn green, an arm stretches out from the car in front of you, cocks and uncocks two fingers and flicks the nasty cigarette butt out of the pristine car s/he is driving, even as the smoke clears. As though no one notices? More than 4.5 trillion cigarette butts are littered world-wide each year. One of the most disgusting annoyances is, again, found while waiting at the red light. Because you’re alert for the light to change, you notice the driver ahead of you carefully take his or her ashtray out of the car, so as not to litter in the car for Pete’s sake, and promptly dump the contents in the roadway, leaving a pile of filthy, nicotine-stained butts on the macadam to eventually find their way into the pristine waters that surround us in Southwest Florida. In a short time, you would be home or near a garbage can without polluting.   Okay, I get it that some newer cars don’t have ashtrays, but that’s no excuse to throw a lit or dead butt out of the window. Get a portable ashtray, they make them, and dump the butts in your own trash. Twice, I’ve called 911 about fires in the medians of Airport-Pulling Rd and Collier Blvd as a result of a discarded butt that’s still lit and hot. It takes up to ten minutes for a butt to die out and if it lands on something flammable, as has happened here, devastation could result.   But wait, there’s more. It’s illegal and has the same penalty as if you dropped a bigger piece of litter – it’s litter, no matter what the size is. They’re found outside stores and restaurants in record numbers, parking lots and take-out lines. Is it too much of a strain to put it out and drop it in one of the many trash cans available for litter? It would take seconds to step on it to ensure the butt is out cold and then place it in the receptacle there for that purpose.   We often hear about the plastics that are choking our waterways, beaches, and killing our sea life and birds. BUT, the real culprit in the pollution category is cigarette butts, which amount to over 200 tons of litter per year. I hope you are as stunned as I was to read this. And, cigarette butts are almost indestructible, in fact, it takes years for a cigarette butt to disintegrate and even after years, the plastic in the butt remains. And all the while the chemicals, like arsenic and lead elements, seep into our water systems. Many of the facts in this paragraph came from Truth Initiative, which you can search for at (truthinitiative.org) and find many related facts about emerging smokeless tobacco products, including pouches that can be concealed in the mouth, designed with flavors to appeal to our youth. There are innovative companies trying to alleviate the amount of plastics that find their way into our landfills and waterways. I recently found some attractive jeans that were made from recycled plastic bottles so decided to try them. Not only do they fit well, they wash and dry beautifully with little shrinkage. My self-satisfied grin about this discovery was reinforced by doing something proactive to help our environment. There are other strategies of course, like recycling, instead of adding them to the landfill. Plastics are being recycled into many useful products, given the opportunity.   Innovative companies are also trying to alleviate the tons of cigarette butts by also making them recyclable. Into what, you might ask. Who would want anything made out of a dirty old cigarette butt? There’s a company called TerraCycle that has developed innovative ways of recycling “hard-to-recycle items,” according to Tom Szaky, CEO of TerraCycle, “from diapers to coffee pods to cigarette butts.” “With the recycled materials, they make new products including ashtrays, shipping pallets and plastic lumber for building usage. Organizations can place Cigarette Butt Receptacles in high-traffic areas, collect the waste and ship it to TerraCycle for recycling unto usable material.” (waste360.com).   Don’t you think that it’s time to get off our “butts” and clean up our Earth?  

Popper fidget toys are the latest 2021 children's craze but how environmentally friendly are they?

A spokesman for innovative recycling organisation TerraCycle explained: "Where it becomes more complicated is when a waste item is made out of a complex material, or several materials, as is the case with most toys. The process of recycling these materials is complicated and costly and the end product is worth less than the cost of recycling the waste, so the economics simply do not work."

Is recycling a waste? Here’s the answer from a plastics expert before you ditch the effort

Eric Rosenbaum   KEY POINTS
  • Terracycle and Loop founder and CEO Tom Szaky says the economics of the recycling business are broken in key ways, but consumer and corporate interest in building a circular economy continues to grow.
  • Low oil prices, bans on imported recyclables in countries like China, and the latest trends in packaging design make it harder to recycle.
  • Still, the recycling CEO says getting to a low-waste or even zero-waste economy is the way the world once was and can be again.
  Recycling may make you feel better in a very small way about your role in helping to avert a global apocalypse, but even in “friendly” places, from John Oliver to NPR podcasts, recycling, especially of plastics, is being given a hard look. More people are wondering: Does it work? The debate is not new. For years the economics of plastic recycling have been questioned. But the problem is not going away. The globe is already producing two trillion tons of solid waste a year and is on pace to add more than a trillion more on an annual basis in the coming decades, according to World Bank data. A recent study found that the 20 top petrochemical companies in the world, among the group Exxon Mobil and Dow, are responsible for 55% of the world’s single-use plastic waste, and in the U.S., specifically, we are generating about 50 kilograms of throwaway plastic a year, per person. The Covid pandemic has heightened attention to the issue, as use of disposable goods went up anywhere from 30% to 50%, according to Tom Szaky, CEO of recycling companies Terracycle and Loop, who joined CNBC’s Leslie Picker on a recent CNBC Evolve Livestream about sustainability and business. He says concerns about the macroeconomics of waste management systems suffering economically are real, and there are ways to solve it that don’t just rely on government. We all need to take a deeper look at how we recycle beyond the feel-good blue bin, and what we can do to get past the problems. 1. The economics of recycling are broken. Szaky says recent reporting on the economic issues for plastics recycling and restrictions around the world on imported recyclables, which are both weighing on the sector, are not an anti-environmental attack but “absolutely rooted in facts.” He says it is important for consumers to understand that just because you recycle an item does not mean it will be recycled in the end. “What makes something be recycled in a country doesn’t have to do with what we normally think: Can it be recycled? Most of the things we put in blue bins that are not recycled are put in the garbage because they are things waste companies can’t make money off, and that is the true bottleneck,” he said. The right question is “Can a garbage company, the actual company in charge of the recycling in the geography, recycle it at a profit?” According to Szaky, what’s happened is a profitability model that is decreasing as oil prices have gone down, which started in 2015, and even after a commodities market recovery post-Covid, have stayed down relative to recent history. The petrochemicals companies that make plastics rely less on recyclables when the price of their core commodity, oil, is lower. Second, China stopped importing recyclable waste, a move followed by other countries in 2018. Both issues are critically important to the business model of recycling and the health of the infrastructure because they circle back around to how much demand there is to collect those material types. “And it all hurt the business construct for recycling companies and that means our recycling capabilities are deteriorating,” Szaky said. “Recycling is not out there trying to do the best it can but maximize profit and we need to think about that as we aim for a more circular economy,” he said. 2. A packaging industry mega trend is working against recycling The biggest global trend in packaging is not helping. Efforts to reduce costs in products and packaging are “objectively reducing value” Szaky said, “which also makes them less recyclable.” The “lightweighting” of packages, making them have less physical material and more complexity as a result of that design challenge, makes them less profitable to recycle. All of these economic issues lead to a situation in which what people would like to see is not what they would actually see if they went behind the scenes in the recycling industry. But Szaky says at the same time, consumers want to recycle more, and more companies are leaning into their own recycling. What companies decide to do about recycling on their own initiative — and pay for — can be done in spite of the challenging economics and can still pay off for the companies in the future. That’s the Terracycle business model, working with companies to fund their own voluntary recycling efforts. And that is more important at a time when the economics of consumer recycling are a mess. 3. Why companies don’t recycle enough, but should more Szaky says what’s really important right now is companies deciding to lean in and create their own recycling programs. But he says it is still not easy for the corporate mindset to embrace. “As a retailer or brand, if you just frame it as ‘the right thing to do’ the funding will be small and sporadic because there is no P&L logic to do it. But if you can use it to drive foot traffic like Walmart with car seats or Staples with pens, it can be monetizable,” he said. Brands that run their own recycling programs should be doing it as part of a plan to drive more market share and brand preference. And he says it becomes “monetizable in a recognizable way” the bigger they become and the faster they can grow. “That is true for any sustainability measure a company is looking to implement in the short term.” Some products won’t be recycled unless companies are the recycler. A dirty diaper or toothbrush or cigarette is not recyclable because it costs too much. It is another economic problem, not a physics or chemistry one. Terracycle recently launched a diaper recycling program in Holland and now it is expanding to many countries. “Diaper recycling doesn’t make sense from an economic perspective. It is expensive to collect and process,” Szaky said. But for the company that leads, “it can drive core value maybe better than TV ads,” he added. Consumers want to do the right thing, and companies may want to do the right thing as well in acknowledging an environmental crisis — and fund a feel-good marketing campaign — but Szaky stressed that they need to see “not just the right thing, but that it will pay back.” Szaky’s other business, Loop, which works with companies on circular economy production, recently teamed with a luxury watchmaker on the world’s tallest landfill: Mt. Everest. The mountain is littered with oxygen tanks from previous climbs and the watchmaker was able to both clean up the mess, an expensive undertaking, and source metal for its watches, which may add to the story it sells consumers in a way competitors can’t match. 4. The real solution is obvious: Consuming less The white elephant, the fundamental answer to the challenge, is modulating consumption downward, but Szaky says that is a hard one for the business world to champion. “It is fundamentally de-growth.” Loop, even working with companies to create products from recyclables and where the recycling is part of the product story and selling point, “is not the answer to the garbage problem,” he says. It may be among the best ways to manage waste in a circular economy, but Szaky says we will need to aim to go back to a world where garbage doesn’t exist. “Before the 1950s, we received milk from the milkman and mended clothes and cobbled shoes,” he says. Reuse does still exist at scale today in certain markets, such as beer kegs and propane tanks, but not nearly enough, and without the convenience of an infrastructure which makes return easy and widespread. That is one of the keys he sees for the future. 5. Reusable versus recyclable While the goal of zero waste is ambitious, it is realistic to imagine a world in which more consumer products become reusable, if they can be easily returned in the circular economy. Reusable versions of products from Nestle, Procter & Gamble, Kroger, Walgreens, and hundreds of other retailers are being, or will in the future, be made available to consumers. We can switch a consumer who maybe doesn’t even care about sustainability and that’s frankly the most important. We need to bring everyone along, not just people who view this as a high-passion project. Szaky envisions the buy-and-return-anywhere model as a key one for the future. “Buy your favorite shampoo bottle in a reusable form at a Walgreens in New York and drop it off at Burger King and buy an Impossible Whopper in reusable packaging too, and drop that off somewhere else.” This model can help solve a big problem: consumer behavior. Szaky says while there is a significant consumer market motivated by environmental concerns and consumption, for the recycling industry to really work it needs to avoid relying on the most-motivated consumers. Even plastic recycling that is economic today, such as soda bottles, only results in 1 in 4 bottles being recycled. The No. 1 goal for most consumers will remain convenience and value. A reusable package is an upgrade over a disposable package in an objective way, and with the convenience of drop-off locations it can lead to an easier shift in behavior, but it has to be offered at the right value to consumers. “With all three things coming together we can switch a consumer who maybe doesn’t even care about sustainability and that’s frankly the most important,” Szaky said. “We need to bring everyone along, not just people who view this as a high-passion project.” 6. Economics are busted but the recycling mindset matters For all the debate over recycling and the hard facts about its economics, Szaky says there is a reason we talk about it so much. The individual journey with sustainability always begins with recycling. And that remains key and a reason to figure out how to fix its short-term and long-term challenges. When people start recycling, it does open the pathways to a broader change in mindset. “It may lead to a plant-based diet instead of animal protein, or a smaller life, or biking ... creating even more important outcomes,” he says. “But first we have to solve the business problem.”