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Resources
5min read

Why Green Waste Recycling Needs To Be a Priority

Green waste recycling is the best way your municipality can help reduce greenhouse gasses.

Green waste recycling is the best way your municipality can help reduce greenhouse gasses. In the past, municipalities have collected green waste in the form of yard trimmings and garden-related organic materials. Very rarely did it ever include food scraps or compostable food items unless the program was specifically created to include these types of materials.This is changing, and for good reason.

As municipalities look for ways to reduce climate change, green waste has emerged as a viable solution. By lessening the impact that landfills have on the environment, every municipality in North America can help combat harmful gasses in the future.

Consider:

  • Composted food and yard trimmings increased by 5 million tons between 2015 and 2018, according to the latest data from the Environmental Protection Agency.
  • Landfills in North America received 5 million tons of yard trimmings, which made up 7.2% of the total municipal solid waste landfilled in 2018.

With stagnant or absent green waste programs, rising yard and food waste collections, and an increasing need to educate the public about composting, there's so much that can be done to help.

Green waste recycling reduces methane in landfills

How much do you really know about methane? The average landfill in North America is jam-packed with green waste. When left to decay in a landfill it creates enormous amounts of methane gas. As you may already know, methane is one of the greenhouse gasses that is contributing to climate change disaster.

methane in landfills

The good news is that you can make a significant impact on the amount of gasses being released from your local municipal landfills with a methane reduction strategy. To tackle the issue there are a few tactics you can look at implementing now.

#1: Mandatory green waste collections

In 2022, California implemented Senate Bill 1383. The bill makes throwing organic waste into the trash illegal, a positive step that can and should be implemented nationwide. California is taking active steps to reduce methane in their landfills by rolling out accessible green waste collection programs run by various municipalities.

This means the public gets green bins, and the government help in hauling away the yard and food waste that would have wound up at the landfill. With stringent rules in place, businesses will also have to change the way they dispose of their organic waste.

green waste collection

Less food and yard trimmings mean less hydrocarbons escaping. Methane doesn't last as long in the atmosphere as carbon dioxide, so focusing on this gas has a lasting positive impact on reducing climate risk. An accessible green waste collection program encourages your residents to use their green bins, and together you will avoid adding methane emissions to the landfill.

#2: Methane vacuum and combustion (energy recovery)

Many landfills already have energy recovery programs that vacuum up the leaking methane, which is then combusted and converted into energy. Your municipality could lead the way in making sure that every landfill in your district is using energy recovery to reduce methane leakage.

Improving green waste recycling will take time, and a lot of organic waste will continue to find its way into your landfills. When it does, make sure that you are collecting the harmful gasses and putting them to good use for your community.

organic waste

Biogas is 50-70% methane, and once collected can be used to produce heat and electricity, or to create biomethane which is a renewable gas used as vehicle fuel. Look into improving the energy recovery practices at your local landfill.

#3: Increase public education on composting

Official statistics show an encouraging uptick in municipalities offering viable composting programs for their residents. San Francisco composts 255,500 tons of organic material each year, while Vermont has already banned residents from green waste disposal that ends up at the dump. If your municipality doesn't have a composting program or needs to increase the way you educate your residents on how to compost, this is a great time to do it.

Green waste recycling is a critical step. Take action and build mandatory green waste collections into your waste removal system. Ramp up your investment in energy recovery to deal with the methane that does make it through, and educate your residents on composting and recycling better.

recycled plastic products
Resources
5min read

10+ Companies Creating Recycled Plastic Products

See how some of the world's most sustainable brands are using advanced recycling methods for greener business.

Recycled plastic products are everywhere, and that's a good thing. In today's post, we see how some of the world's most sustainable brands are using advanced recycling methods for greener business.

By recycling existing plastic materials into new products for sale, companies tap into a renewable feedstock source that helps limit the production of new plastic items (and keeps them out of the landfill). Companies that use recycled plastics are making a big difference in the world!

Aside from reducing how much new plastic finds its way into the hands of consumers ‚recycled plastics reduce energy during manufacturing by 66%. That means less fuel burnt, and less harm to the local environment.

The truth is, because a lot of plastic is highly recyclable ‚it's an ideal sustainable material. If more businesses can build plastics into their green product models, the world would be better off. Let's take a look at the companies leading the way with their recycled plastic products.

#1: Adidas recycled plastic shoes

In 2019, Adidas made about 11 million pairs of shoes using recycled plastics.

They partnered with Parley, a project for the oceans that focuses on finding solutions to lessen plastic pollution there. So far, the partnership has been incredibly successful, and it's kept some 2,810 tons of plastic from ever reaching the oceans.

#2: Patagonia's plastic jackets

You can't mention recycled plastic products without mentioning Patagonia's jackets.

Since the 1990s, this company has been recycling polyester, which has a positive impact on the Earth. It comes from plastic soda bottles that are spun to make the materials used in their jackets and other lines of clothing. To date, 84% of their fabrics are recycled plastic.

Courtesy of patagonia.com

#3: Fab Habitat's plastic rugs

This ethical company creates eco-friendly rugs and accessories from recycled plastic waste.

Fab Habitat uses PET and polypropylene plastics to spin a soft kind of yarn that is perfect for durable carpet creation. These recycled plastic materials are blended with others like cotton or jute. To date, the company claims to have rescued and recycled millions of plastic bottles from the landfill.

#4: Shini USA's plastic construction materials

The future of construction lies in eco-friendly building materials that use recycled plastic.

From concrete and bricks to recycled plastic boards, lumber, and decking, using plastic in these construction materials makes them cheaper and more durable. Best of all, these structures last a long time, which gives virtually indestructible plastic something valuable to do.

Courtesy of Westpaw.com

#5: West Paw's recycled plastic products

This green-forward company focuses on creating ethical and sustainable products for your pets.

West Paw is best known for their signature material, IntelliLoft®, which is made from recycled plastic bottles. They use this material in everything, from pet beds and blankets to clothing. They also run an amazing plastic recycling program using another material they call Zogoflex®.

#6: Preserve's toothbrush recycling

Preserve creates a lot of recycled plastic items but the best among them is the toothbrush.

Preserve toothbrushes are made from 100% recycled plastic, and they run a program that asks consumers to collect five toothbrushes in a plastic bottle, send them in, and get a $6.00 coupon. When you use this toothbrush, you're participating in a truly closed loop product.

Courtesy of preserve.eco

#7: Recover Brand clothing

Recover has been going since 2009, spinning plastic waste into new fashionable items of clothing.

As plastic recycling companies go, you don't get much more ethical than Recover. Their goal is to reduce plastic waste in rivers, the ocean, landfills, and adventure parks by encouraging socially responsible fashion.

#8: Suga's recycled wetsuits

Recycled plastic products like the humble wetsuit get a fresh start with Suga.

This company collects old, discarded suits, and recycles them into super-soft and stylish yoga mats. The neoprene found in wetsuit materials is perfect for reworking into a fully recyclable product, and the SugaMat doesn't disappoint.

#9: Method cleaning products

This cleaning company uses curbside collected plastics to craft its product packaging.

Products made from recycled plastic bottles and other waste are an eco-friendly solution to using new plastics. As a sustainable business, the founders of Method spend a little more to recycle the plastic they need to create their large range of cleaning materials.

Courtesy of greentoys.com

#10: Green Toys made from plastic pollution

The company Green Toys creates imaginative children's toys using recycled milk jugs.

On their website, they state that for every pound of milk jugs recycled, enough energy is saved to power a television for 3 weeks or a laptop for a month. They have recycled over 113,312,538 jugs to date, changing the world one green toy at a time.

#11: Bureo builds from plastic waste

Bureo takes discarded plastic fishing nets and turns them into amazing new products.

These recycled plastic products become clothing, sunglasses, and even skateboards. As a B corporation, Bureo's mission to clean up the oceans underpins all of its product creation. Along with recycling, the company works to spread education about reducing plastic waste.

Get more recycling facts here.

These trailblazing companies are tapping into an abundant resource and are finding ways to turn something harmful into something helpful in the world. If your business has been considering creating recycled plastic products, draw inspiration from these eco-friendly product pioneers.

Which of these plastic items did you find most promising and why? Tell us below.

aluminum foil recycling
Resources
5min read

Aluminum Foil Recycling (5 Must-Know Tips for Work)

Aluminum is everywhere, including your workplace recycling stream.

Are your foil recycling practices up to date at work? Aluminum is everywhere, but nowhere is it more common than the average employee's lunchbox. Even the foil from your CEO's pastrami sandwich has, at some point, found its way into your workplace recycling stream.

According to the Aluminum Association, this precious metal is among the most valuable and recyclable materials known to humanity. It forms a perfect closed loop and can be recycled--endlessly and forever! Some 75% of all products made from aluminum are recycled in the U.S.

But what about foil? Recycling this tricky type of aluminum is not so straightforward. Here are 5 must-know tips that will help you optimize the way you recycle aluminum foil at work this year.

#1: Teach employees that foil is recyclable

What is aluminum foil anyway? Most of your employees will know that foil is potentially recyclable, but because they aren't sure of the composition (foil sheets, or pans, or packaging) they may decide to dispose of it in your workplace trash can. And tin foil is not biodegradable.

A single American throws away roughly three pounds of foil every year. If it reaches the landfill, it will take approximately 400 years to break-down through the oxidation process. Worse still, if it's burnt it contributes to toxic air pollution and releases harmful gasses into our atmosphere.

#2: Contaminated tin foil can't be recycled

Clean tin foil is magically recyclable forever, until it comes into contact with your lunch. Because foil recycling relies on clean materials, your employees can't just ball up their foil and throw it in the recycling bin at work. Once the foil is contaminated with food waste, it stops being viable.

If enough contaminated foil gets into your stream, it has the potential to ruin every other material in that load. This means none of it can be recycled, so the entire process is rendered null and void. Educate your employees about clean tin foil recycling to prevent contamination at work.

Here is why workplace recycling education is so vital.

#3: Start a tin foil reuse and recycle program

The good news is that you're not powerless against the food contamination making its way into your canteen. Your green team can start an amazing foil recycling initiative to encourage employees to wash their foil packaging, sheets, and pans before adding them to your recycling bins.

Tin foil programs are part of the "reuse" initiatives that inspire employees to either take their foil home to be washed (most types are dishwasher safe!) and reused as an infinitely better alternative to plastic. Aluminum packaging is strong and can be used repeatedly‚ then it can be recycled.

Tin foil trays that are empty

#4: Get Creative About Reusing Foil at Work

Aluminum foil recycling is the final step in the lifecycle of your foil (before it becomes another aluminum product). The goal of sustainability for your green team is to keep the recyclable material in play as long as it's useful, and to only recycle it once it has no more use at the office.

Tin foil has an enormous range of uses that you can take advantage of at work. It polishes silverware, cleans grills, scrubs dishes, sharpens scissors, improves radiator efficiency, and reflects light in a sun box for office plants. Find ways to lengthen its lifespan as part of your tin foil reuse program.

#5: Think big when it comes to impact

Once your green team has established the protocols for your aluminum foil recycling and reuse program‚ you can think about extending it to expand your impact. Other companies in your area or niche will have similar problems. Perhaps recycling contaminated foil has reduced their recycling impact or motivated them to start an initiative of their own.

Office lunches in tin foil containers

Your team can be the spark that helps other companies institute their own aluminum initiatives. Host green team talks and share your experience running campaigns at work. Show other teams how much of a difference can be made when small changes become a part of your workplace culture. Together you can make foil recycling just as common as can recycling in your area.

These 5 must-know tips will help you improve the level of education about aluminum foil and the ways it can be recycled. If every workplace bands together to take extra care of the materials that have a truly closed loop, we stand to benefit from less resource consumption, less pollution, and an abundance of recycling materials that can be refashioned into products made for sale.

Right now, aluminum cans are the easiest to recycle, but we want to challenge your green team to start tackling the products that aren't so easy. This year, set a goal to make foil recycling a regular practice among your employees, and eventually, as a part of daily practice in every workplace.

Ask us about our custom educational programs.

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Resources
5min read

The Importance of Recycling Education for City Residents

Every municipality has different recycling practices, processes, and programs. The answer? Localized, relevant education.

When you think of recycling education, what springs to mind? Maybe it's a classroom filled with kids and a teacher holding a papier-mâché earth. Or a business conference where climate leaders speak about sending less waste to overburdened landfills.

Whatever image comes to mind, it's unlikely that you first thought of a family at home, learning about recycling together. Traditionally, recycling education is taught in school, and then almost never again unless an individual goes looking for it.

While recycling is an important lesson to learn at school, this education should continue well beyond the classroom. Adults can engage in more complex, nuanced discussion than school children, which is what community recycling demands in times like these. Every municipality has different recycling practices, processes, and programs. For true community recycling cohesion, the aim should be to connect and educate adult residents. Simply stated, school recycling education is not enough to create adults that know how to recycle correctly.

1. Foster strong community development

A good recycling program can transform a community, but it takes resident buy-in. The Environmental Protection Agency says that a strong recycling program is key to developing a healthy and united community. It takes everyone in a local area to commit to cleaner, greener habits and as they perform these actions, they discover a deep sense of connection with those around them.

A unified community contributes to lowering greenhouse gasses in their area, while functional recycling programs create more local jobs and tax revenue. Quality of life is something that begins with caring about your environment, and benefits the entire community. Recycling education is an important link in the chain of green responsibility and sustainable community development. Without it, you can't expect residents to recycle well, to take advantage of the programs you put in place, or succeed in achieving a truly green-focused municipality.

2. Conversations in the home

Since the pandemic struck in 2020, more people are spending time at home. That means most waste created by individuals is being disposed of at home. This is a unique and unprecedented opportunity to educate residents about recycling right where they live. With so many ways to deliver home-based recycling education, families can now engage with nuanced and complex recycling issues, understanding more about the "whys" and "whats" than ever before. There is a real chance to reduce recycling material contamination in your recycling streams.

People want to help, and they're willing to go above and beyond to make their community more eco-friendly. Studies suggest that when residents understand more about what recycled waste becomes, they are willing to do more.

Recycle Coach has launched pilot programs in various U.S. locations and have had great success delivering education to families in residential locations using the Recycle Coach app. Not only does our app connect residents to your municipality to improve their locational awareness, the campaigns run on our platform address your municipality's specific recycling issues. It's education that targets blind spots that your residents don't even know that they have. By educating residents about what to recycle, how to recycle and what should never be recycled in your stream you're creating a cleaner, more effective program for your city.

If you're interested in improving how many people recycle, and how well they do it in your municipality, then recycling education is the answer. You can't rely on school education or expect to grow a unified community force that will help your recycling programs succeed if there is no way for your residents to absorb and engage with the recycling knowledge they need.

This year we challenge you to see what your residents can really do when equipped with the right information. Educating residents to recycle better will help you see real results. Invest in recycling education for your municipality, and spark the change your community is waiting for.

Industry News
5min read

Innovations in E-waste Recycling (And Why You Need Them)

Shining a light on e-waste recycling, the problems it poses, and solutions for the future.

E-waste recycling doesn't get nearly enough attention. Over the past few years, e-waste has taken a back seat to highlight more pressing recycling concerns - namely the current plastic crisis and ongoing wish-cycling that is crippling the industry. We've told ourselves that electronic waste is under control. But is it?

While e-waste makes up just 2% of North America's landfill trash, discarded electronics also contain the most toxic waste of any other consumer product residents are using and throwing away. Some 70% of the nation's toxic waste is e-waste.

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With new electronics released every few months, and demand growing the future needs to be toxic waste, and e-waste smart. Right now, we are recycling about 12-13% of all electronics being discarded, which is nowhere near enough to protect our local environments from harm.In today's article, we take a look at the latest innovations in e-waste recycling, and why you need to start making these a priority for your municipality.

E-Waste Reclamation Programs

Solving the e-waste problem is going to take some time. While the best minds in North America work on that, it's up to our Public Works Directors to make sure that people have locations where they can drop their significant amounts of e-waste. Many of the materials in computers, cell phones and televisions contain metals that have real value, like gold, aluminum, silver, copper, palladium, iridium and iron. Reclamation programs work to collect and strip these discarded electronics of their reusable and valuable materials.

Image_2_Ewaste_Collection

Many states have implemented laws that make companies who sell these items responsible for their reclamation, which is a step in the right direction. Additional e-waste recycling programs should be implemented at learning institutions, shopping malls and local libraries.

The harmful effects of e-waste on environmental areas are well-known. When locals don't recycle, these items create toxic landfill zones that pollute the ground, the air, and the water in surrounding locations. Human life and wildlife suffer as a result of living near toxic environments.

Innovations in reclamation include:

  • An incredible biological filter made from mushrooms that is able to reclaim up to 80% of the gold found in e-waste. This comes courtesy of a Research Centre in Finland. This process removes the need for harmful chemicals, and it's significantly more effective.
  • Silicone circuit boards have been developed by researchers at the University of Illinois. These can be dissolved in water, dramatically reducing the impact of e-waste reclamation and disposal in landfills. Likewise, dissolvable batteries are being developed for similar reasons.
  • Magnetic sorting of e-waste must be embraced to easily split non-magnetic materials from magnetics materials during the scrap sorting process. Magnetic separators are becoming a powerful force in efficient e-waste recycling practice. One company experienced a 300% improvement in processing capacity after installing this technology.
Image_3_Ewaste_Sorting

Support for E-waste Recycling Education

Electronic waste recycling starts with residents and companies in your municipality. When you support e-waste education it will help residents understand their role in the recycling process, and how to achieve it without causing contamination or harm.Recycle Coach will help you bring everyone together, so that rolling out specific types of recycling information like this is easier. Our technology takes care of the residential education that you need to implement at the start of every successful e-waste recycling process.

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Support for E-waste Technology and Progress

Technology has the ability to transform the efficiency of the e-waste recycling industry. With better laws that promote recycling, the integration of new technologies and innovations and a push for greater e-waste recycling knowledge among the general public the industry can and will improve.

E-waste has the potential to become a viable income stream for businesses that engage in their own reclamation programs. With an average of 24 electronic devices per household, it's essential that these programs practical and educational are rolled out as soon as possible.

The Public Works Department of every municipality must move to support greater investment for e-waste reclamation facilities, new technologies and resident involvement. E-waste recycling is a long way away from being under control and plans must be made now to recover what we can.

These electronic waste innovations will help us prevent the toxic environmental impact that comes with leaving these items in the landfill or incinerating them. By 2030, each municipality in North America must have established a way for residents to successfully recycle the majority of their electronics safety and consistently. It's up to you to begin this process from within your department.

It's time to make e-waste recycling a priority, so that we can stop telling ourselves it's under control, and actually get it under control.

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Resources
5min read

5 Ways to Promote Plastic Recycling in Your Community

5 creative ways to promote plastic recycling to your community.

Recycling education is a challenge in any given community. The keys to reaching your community's residents are consistency, a reliable, effective recycling education platform like Recycle Coach, and unique ideas to reach your residents. Below, we've listed a few to help you get started.

1. Educate on #1 and #2 plastics

Residents falsely assume that all plastics can be recycled, or that any plastic bearing a number and recycling arrows is recyclable. One way to decrease plastic recycling contamination in your waste streams is to educate residents on which plastics can be recycled.

Your educational outreach is up to you. You can reach your community's residents through email or social media campaigns, you can create a series of blog posts that can be released through your municipality, you can create a radio or television showcase on your local news channel, or you can collaborate with local groups.

2. Implement targeted residential campaigns

Every town or city in North America faces unique recycling challenges. Targeted residential campaigns zero in on these challenges and aim to fix them. Using new technology, residents are educated about an area of concern, which promotes mass change.

One example is the recent case study conducted by the City of Newark to reduce plastic bag recycling. Using Recycle Coach, residents were taught not to recycle single use plastic. The result was an 82% reduction in plastic waste ending up in the recycling stream.

3. Network with local groups

Social media can be a force for positive change if you know how to use it. Search your location: you'll find grassroots social media groups in your area looking for ways to improve recycling, to be greener, and to make an impact on their local environment.

Take the opportunity to collaborate with them on Facebook, LinkedIn, Pinterest, Instagram, and TikTok. Tell them about your plastic recycling drive, and ask them to help you spread the word (with tips from Adobe Express). Collaboration is an effective tool for spreading your message to residents you wouldn't normally reach.

4. Host a community event

Hosting a community get-together with activities, proper disposal containers to serve as educators, and information panels and pamphlets gets you out there into the community and ensures you're a part of it. Meet the people where they are; otherwise, you're just another website. Other community events can include battery and e-waste collection days and park and roadside cleanups.

5. Sponsor a school-wide drive

School-wide drives are an old classic but you can put a fresh spin on them by inviting everyone at the school your team is visiting to download your recycling app. Once connected, you can access plastic campaigns, leader boards, and reward the kids with points and prizes.

Combine an outing to an endangered area or sanctuary with lessons on the app to teach kids about plastic pollution while on the go. Get them all to play a game in-app where they pick up plastic litter from a road in their neighborhood. Show them what a difference it makes!

Promoting plastic recycling in the community isn't always easy. People lead busy lives and don't take the time to stop and hear the messages around them. That's why using technology is so effective. By engaging them and making them a part of something bigger, we stand to impact real change.

The nation is recycling less plastic than ever before. It's time to make this year the one that your municipality stops the plastic epidemic for once and for all. Focus on inspiring residents to change their behavior and solve a key problem in the plastic recycling chain. Whether it's rolling out new education initiatives, connecting with local grassroots groups on Facebook, or hosting large community events online, everyone needs to be aware that plastic is a threat.

How to do a waste audit
Resources
5min read

How to Do a Waste Audit for Your Company

A quick and easy checklist to get started with an office waste audit.

According to Great Forest, 62% of waste that goes to the landfill is not trash--it’s made up of recyclable glass, metal, plastics, and paper, compostable organic material, and e-waste.  

If you've been given the go- ahead to audit your company’s waste production, it's up to you to find out what type of waste you’re dealing with and whether you can reduce your landfill disposal rate,  ultimately saving your company money. We’ve put together a quick and easy checklist to help you outline your next steps so your team can get moving on what matters: making your company more waste efficient.  

What is a waste audit, really?

A good audit of your company's waste will tell you everything you need to know to streamline your trash disposal and recycling practices for the benefit of your waste management processes.

Waste audits happen for a number of reasons:

  • To benchmark your company's current processes and environmental impact
  • To understand where there are opportunities for improvement
  • For trend monitoring and the development of new initiatives
  • To reduce, reuse, and recycle more waste to keep it out of the landfill

 

First, two key issues must be solved: what is recyclable, and what isn’t? First, check to see if your municipality works with us using our Find My Municipality tool. From there, you can use our “What Goes Where” feature to look up any item. If you don't have access to a web-based app, you can usually find your municipality’s guidelines on your local government’s website.  

Conducting a waste audit is a great way to kick off a high-performance recycling program. Let's move onto learning how to start.  

1. Plan your waste audit

Planning is a vital step in the process for your green team. You need to figure out the who, the how and the why to get this done right. That means calling an official meeting.

  • Assign roles and conduct a walk-through
    Knowing how to do a waste audit starts with the right core team. Assign the best green team members you have to this important task and host a company walkthrough.
  • Note where waste disposal takes place
    During the walkthrough, you'll visit each disposal location and take note of any obvious issues. These are the locations your team will be collecting waste samples from on your allotted dates.  
  • Understand how waste is currently managed
    At the end of your first meeting, outline the A-Z of what happens from the time trash is created > your hauler collecting it > it being sorted at a waste transfer station > when it arrives at the landfill.  
  • Recruit your cleaning staff
    No one knows the disposal practices of your company better than your cleaning staff. At your second meeting, invite key members of the cleaning staff so that you can chat to them about how to conduct a waste audit with your team. Once you have enlisted their help, run through exactly what you expect from them so that no questions are left unanswered. They will need a full step-by-step process here.  
  • Sync your timelines and schedules
    Set a logical time and date for regular waste audits that involve all of your committed team members and cleaning staff.

Tip: Make sure to also chat about how corporate e-waste and other materials are currently managed and take note of any glaring opportunities.  

Image credit: Advanceddisposal.com

2. Design and prep your audit worksheets

Create or download a waste audit worksheet for your team to use during the disposal audit. This worksheet will help you capture the data you need for decision making.  

Key areas to note:

  • Types of waste:
    make sure to record the composition or material of each waste type.
  • Where certain waste types come from
    e.g., paper from the copying machine room. That way you can spot where certain types of material are most commonly found on premises.
  • What you will need to complete the physical audit
    Have the tools you need on hand! On your worksheet, create a checklist of the required trash audit tools:  
    • A designated sorting area
    • Protective clothing/gear
    • A scale
    • Trash bags
    • A tarp for sorting through the trash
    • Labels
    • Worksheets & pens
    • Storage containers
    • Camera or phones
    • Latex or nitrile gloves
    • First aid kit
    • Cleaning materials
    • Labeled bins
    • Clear goggles
    • Your team
    • Waste samples

3. Collect, sort, and track your waste

Arrange with your cleaning staff to have transparent plastic bags in all waste bins during auditing weeks. During week one, audit your trash for three days—Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday--to get an average. Mondays and Fridays have higher rates of absences, so audits on these days may not be as accurate. Each audit will last for about 1-3 hours, depending on the amount of trash you're sorting through. Get your protective gear on!

  • Remove the bags from each waste container for weighing and observing
    Group the bags together by waste type and location, label them, then weigh each group together. If you have a designated corporate e-waste area, it must be audited as well.  
  • Take photos
    Every location should be analyzed separately. At the end of each location sample, take photos of the sorted trash.  
  • Record waste quantities and weight
    In your waste audit spreadsheet, record the quantities and weight of each group. You'll need these data quantities for later analysis in step two.  
  • Estimate averages
    After you've sorted your waste and have completed the cleanup‚ you will need to estimate your averages. Calculate your diversion rate by using the following formula:

                      weight of recycling
                    ____________________    X 100
                     weight of recycling +
                      weight of garbage

Make a note of what is recyclable and what's not.  

  • Do random audits for two weeks

For the next two weeks following your initial audit, perform random audits to make sure your averages are correct. Pick 2-3 days over those two weeks (after your initial audit period) to check that there are no major changes in weight or material content. If there are, investigate why.  

4. Check estimates against existing records

Once all of your data is collected and refined, you can check it against existing records. This is where you will discover areas in need of improvement.

  • Cross reference with purchase records
    Step three of conducting a waste audit is taking your data and cross referencing it with purchase records. This will help you understand how trash is created and how much of what is bought is being discarded.  
  • Take note of external factors
    Your waste management recycle bins will also contain trash from other sources. Take note of anything interesting (e.g., a lot of batteries in location 4).  
  • Cross reference with waste disposal company
    Finally, cross reference your data with your waste disposal company's data to reveal hidden gems. When you recycle shredded paper, waste management companies record your output. Get this data to use when you create your plan to reduce office waste.

5. Prepare your waste audit report

Your completed waste audit worksheet stack will be used to create a report for management.  

  • Graph and chart your findings
    At your final meeting or two, spend time creating graphs and charts detailing your findings for your presentation. Compile all photos and highlight all opportunities found in your audit. For example, if your plastic waste recycling is contaminated with other materials, mention that in your report, along with contamination rates and how it can be improved using a simple educational tool.  
  • Establish benchmarks
    You have the data to benchmark your progress. Well done! These benchmarks will act as your baseline starting point.  
  • Set goals for improvement
    From here, you'll want to establish new goals to improve every part of your waste management process. You can present these goals as percentage improvements in your report. Set ambitious goals for your company and order them by priority. For example, if one waste management area is non-existent, work on that first.  

Present your findings to your management team and to your company as a whole. Show stakeholders the opportunities in better waste management. Questions like “What can I recycle for money?” and “How much can we cut our landfill diversion by?” are ones that every employee at your company should entertain.  

Here's a quick recap of our 5-step checklist:

  1. Plan your waste audit
  • Assign roles and conduct a walk-through
  • Note where waste disposal takes place (locations)
  • Understand how waste is currently managed
  • Recruit your cleaning staff
  • Sync your schedule and timelines

  1. Design and prep your audit worksheets
  • Types of waste
  • Where certain waste types come from
  • What you will need to complete the physical audit

  1. Collect, sort, and track your waste
  • Collect your company’s waste
  • Take photos  
  • Record waste quantities and weight
  • Estimate averages  

  1. Check estimates against existing records
  • Cross referencing with purchase records
  • Take note of external factors
  • Cross referencing with waste disposal company

  1. Prepare your waste audit report
  • Graph and chart your findings
  • Establish benchmarks  
  • Set goals for improvement

 

From planning your waste audit to compiling the report once the data is collected, you now have a route forward. If you have any questions or would like to know how your business or municipality can partner with us, reach out to us here.

Top recycling tips
Resources
5min read

22 Top Recycling Tips for the Workplace That You Can Implement Today

20+ tips to make recycling at the office a breeze.

Nine out of ten people say that they would recycle if it were easier, so it's up to you and your team to make recycling simple and effective at your company. Check out these recycling tips for the office, and choose one to focus on each week. You'll be surprised at the difference you can make by changing one small thing at a time.

1. Have a wish-cycle target

Does your company have a wish-cycle target yet? Set a goal to reduce improper recycling practices at your company so that waste contamination rates improve. A waste audit is a good place to start, and once you know the extent of the problem, you can work to fix it. Announce your wish-cycle target to the company to get everyone on board.

2. Install a rinse station

Waste contamination is a real problem. One of our best workplace recycling tips involves moving your recycling bins near a rinse station or installing one in the cafeteria where food waste is prominent. When your employees can rinse out their reusable lunch boxes and wash out their recyclables, less contamination will happen when they throw their paper, plastic and glass items away.

3. Put filtered water in the fridge

The studies are in: filtered tap water is the healthiest type of water you can drink. Bottled mineral water has roughly the same mineral content as tap water. So there is no need for bottled water.

Instead of giving employees access to bottled water, make filtered water available in your fridges, and through your taps.

4. Create a paper policy

A vulnerable recycling area in the office is in the copy room, where paper is used. If you want to reduce use and recycle paper correctly‚ take some time to draw up a paper policy. This will outline important recycling rules that your employees don't know about‚ like how to dispose of shredded paper the right way (hint: it's not usually in the recycling). Stick these on the walls.

5. Add more recycling bins

There are ways to recycle more, but first you have to make sure your office has enough bins. So many workplaces only have one or two recycling areas! Consider adding recycling bins to areas of the office that would see a lot of action‚ like in cafeterias, outside kitchens, and near exits. People won't have to walk as far, which means they're far more likely to use them.

6. Set up a reuse station

This can be done for different materials--even for old things your employees don't want anymore. Designate a cupboard or shelved area where employees can take their extra or second-hand office supplies, clothes, and furniture. Be creative with ways to get more use out of these items! Have an additional area where things can be retired after being reused. That's how to recycle old clothes, supplies and products right.

7. Get a web-based recycling app

For unlimited recycling tips and ideas, consider getting a recycling app that will link your employees together and make green initiatives easier to manage. Ask your app things like, "Can plastic straws be recycled?" and "How do I know what can and can't be recycled?." It will have the answers. Apps are a great way to deliver instant education daily.

8. Discourage disposable cups

We all love coffee culture, but it doesn't have to be at the expense of the earth. Reducing your employees addiction to single-use coffee cups will be challenging‚ but you can do it! Part of a sustainable lunch box means making your people aware that coffee cups can't be recycled. Just one cup a day equates to 23 pounds of waste per person each year. The impact is enormous. So put up posters, send emails, and have enough mugs available for everyone to use. Get the word out that your company is anti-disposable cups.

9. Use desktop recycling trays

Here is one of those recycling tips for the office that immediately helps employees collect and recycle a particular material the right way. Instead of recycling bins at each person's desk, try desktop recycling trays that collect paper, or plastic items.

Paper, for example, is lightweight, and employees tend to use a lot of it at their desks. Much of it ends up in the trash because people get busy, but these trays fit neatly in the corner of any desk!

10. Put bins where it counts

A green recycling bin strategically placed in the break room where people eat lunch and congregate is bound to see more action than one in the middle of a hallway. Centralizing bins is a great idea, but sometimes it makes your employees walk too far to make their recycling count. Making it easy is about putting your bins where your people hang out the most.

11. Print on both sides

Reusing paper is a great way to immediately halve your paper waste. Paper recycling tips like this one can be company-wide; all it takes is a commitment to printing on both sides. Any paper that has been used once and can be used again should be placed at the upcycle station or near the printer.

12. Switch to a white board or smart board.

Do you still use large sheets of paper for everything in the office? Switching to a reusable board will cut down on your paper waste.

13. Make printing optional

Who needs to print so much in this day and age of digital screens and mobile technology? Before you print things before meetings, give your employees the option to bring their tablet or laptop instead. There are good ways to recycle, but if you can save on material use, do that first. Announce to your company that printing documents is now optional at meetings.

14. Use easily recyclable products

Products made from recycled materials should always be your first choice. Glass, for example, is infinitely recyclable‚ as long as it doesn't get contaminated. Get management to commit to buying recyclable products only so that you can rid yourself of any non-sustainable items that just become waste.

15. Add organic waste bins

Add an organic waste bin to your recycling program, and fill it with food scraps. Some 30% of what we throw away is food waste. It's a great way to close the food recycling loop: food is grown, eaten, discarded, and made into compost, only to grow more food again.

You'll need a green recycling bin that goes indoors and is emptied regularly. Clear labels, along with educational posters will go a long way to kicking off your food waste recycling project.

16. Avoid food packaging

Aim for zero-waste at lunch! Buy naked food products, and, if you have to, look at switching from packaged ready-made meals for your employees to a more canteen-style approach, where food can be dished onto reusable plates.

17. Compost your food waste

If you've started an organic waste program, then why not compost your waste? So many companies have plants and gardens now that it seems like a waste not to use what you've got. Composting has added benefits, like adding nutrients back into the soil and improving the water quality in your area. If you're looking for a way to use your organic waste, this is it.

18. Appoint department captains

Employees at your company will want to help your green team achieve their goals. To get you there faster, and to keep your people accountable‚ appoint recycling department captains.

One of the most interesting facts about recycling is that with increased stewardship, results improve across the board. Department captains will help your green team engage with various employees.

19. Do a paper audit

The average employee uses 10,000 sheets of paper every year. That's an entire tree's worth of paper--per person each year. Your company can do better, starting with a paper audit. Along with reducing paper use, there are better ways to recycle paper in the office. Find out how much paper is being recycled and how much is being thrown in the trash to begin with.

20. Get a smart search tool

Our "What Goes Where" tool instantly tells you what can be recycled. Simply input the item into the search bar and it will tell you whether or not it can be recycled. Learn how to recycle bubble wrap, plastic wrap, and thousands of other materials.

21. Maintain your company garden

If you have a company garden and an organic waste program‚ instead of sending your compost away, use it in your own grounds.

Grow food, plants, and make your company beautiful using recycled food from your own restaurants, cafeterias, and employees. It will boost the morale of everyone who uses it.

22. Provide incentives

If your goal is to rid yourself of wish-cycling, or to raise your recycling rate by 20%, incentivize it for your employees. Offer a range of prizes for the best recycler or recycling team every month, and track everyone's progress using a web-based app. You'll be amazed how much people will enjoy it.

Use these 22 top recycling tips to reshape your office culture and become a lean, green recycling team! Nothing can hold you back when you have inspired ideas on your side.

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