Category Archives: Latest News

Single Use Bag Bans:Yay or Nay?

Whether you are well versed in the single use plastic bag debacle or if you are just hearing about it, action needs to be taken to prevent these breed of bags from causing any more damage. Many countries and cities have either banned single use plastic bags completely or have placed a tax on the plastic bag. Getting rid of these plastic bags entirely makes sense for environmental issues but whats happening in response is cross contamination, and the waste of reusable bags as well. What if we had biodegradable single use plastic bags that were also recyclable, a new start for the single use earth friendly plastic bag. ENSO has the technology to create single use biodegradable & recyclable plastic bags, Why not take advantage of this?- Megan Bentley

 

PLASTIC BAGS ART

This is an interesting article that inspired this blog, Make sure to give it a read there is a lot of great information!

 

Countries That Have Banned Plastic Bags

We all know how terrible plastic bags are for the environment—they choke wildlife, they don’t break down in landfills (or in oceans), they add to our demand for oil, and they aren’t easy to recycle, which is the biggest reason why 90 percent of plastic bags in the U.S. are not recycled.

Yet an estimated 500 billion to 1 trillion plastic bags are used worldwide every year—380 billion of those in the U.S.—and governments have been slow-moving at best to do anything about them.

Starting January 1, 2011, single-use non-biodegradable plastic bags will be outlawed in Italy. And while plenty of questions remain about the ban’s rules and efficacy, it’s a considerable leap, seeing as how Italy uses 25% of all the plastic bags in Europe — around 25 billion a year.

Neighboring Bulgaria‘s move to impose a tax on plastic bags as of July 1, 2011, as reported in the Sophia Echo is only the latest attempt across Eastern Europe and the Middle East to discourage the use of disposable bags.

The nascent Environment Ministry in Syria – where an estimated 15 million bags are consumed each day just Damascus and the area around in the capital — has distributed fabric and paper bags to markets as part of a campaign to get people to just say “no” to plastic bags. While paper bags are not particularly environmentally friendly in their manufacture, they pose less of a danger to animals.

In the United Arab Emirates, dead camels have been found with lumps of plastic in their stomach weighing up to 30 kilograms — the equivalent of 4,000 plastic bags. According to the UAE’s Ministry of Environment and Water, which plans to ban plastic bags in the UAE by 2012, 85 percent of emirate residents “say they have heard or read about the detrimental effects of plastic bags, but fewer than half do anything about it.”

Turkey is also taking slow steps toward breaking the plastic-bag habit, though they have not been without some implementation troubles. The Kadıköy district of Istanbul was praised last year for being the first municipality in Turkey to ban plastic bags.

In California, the ban started in San Francisco in select stores; if pending legislation goes through, it could soon expand to all stores not only in the city, but in the entire state. A similar ban exists in coastal North Carolina and was recently passed in Portland.

 

In 2007, Modbury became the first town to ban the plastic bag in Britain, where 13 billion plastic bags are given away every year. If customers forget to bring their own, reports the Times Online, “a range of bags made of recycled cotton with organic and fairtrade certification will be available from £1.50 to £3.95 and cheaper paper and biodegradeable cornstarch bags will cost 5p and 10p.” Other cities have followed suit, some just a few months ago, and there are efforts to make London plastic bag-free by the time the Olympics come around in 2010. According to the Daily Mail, “Londoners use 1.6billion plastic bags a year – for an average of just 20 minutes per bag.”

Mexico City adopted a ban last summer—the second major city in the western hemisphere to do so.

India seems to be taking the lead in bans on plastic bags, although enforcement is sometimes questionable. Cities including Delhi, Mumbai, Karwar, Tirumala, Vasco, Rajasthan all have a ban on the bag.

A ban went into effect (with little notice) in Rangoon, Burma, late last year.

In neighboring China, the use of plastic bags is restricted.

Plastic bags have been banned in Bangladesh since 2002, after being found to be responsible for the 1988 and 1998 floods that submerged most of the country.

Rwanda is the country, which has had a ban on plastic bags for years, has a reputation for being one of the cleanest nations not only on the continent, but in the world.

Sydney’s Oyster Bay was the first Australian suburb to ban plastic bags. Twelve towns in Australia are now said to be plastic bag-free—an effort to cut down on the estimated 6.7 billion plastic bags used in Australia every year.

http://current.com/1k2vd4c

 

 

How do you know if it is ENSO?

You might be thinking, Wow this ENSO plastic product not only sounds green but it actually is green! Biodegradable and Recyclable, you will no longer experience guilt because you cannot recycle and your effort to be green has failed because ENSO plastics WILL biodegrade. It is just so simple and natural, the way things should be. The way all plastic products should be.

But what once seemed like an easy decision like running into the store and grabbing the first water bottle you see, now comes with options and requires a second thought. That thought being, which one of these bottles offers the best environmental benefits? The answer is ENSO. Make sure to check for our logo, if it’s not there read the labeling to be sure you’re choosing a Naturally Biodegradable bottle that is also Recyclable. (Not all brands choose to include our logo in their marketing strategy)

For those wanting to make decisions that will nurture our Earth I have compiled a list of brands that use ENSO plastic (not all inclusive). Next time you are in a store look for these brands first! Some of these you probably see quite often and had no idea they were made with ENSO, right? Well now you know, so make the wiser more informed decision and choose products that use ENSO every chance you get. The more consumers are aware and wanting to choose the ENSO option, the more manufacturers will be willing to make a change and go ENSO as well. Lets take control of our waste and get this world on the right track.

  • Redleaf
  • Native Waters
  • Global Garden Friends
  • Northern Chill
  • Culligan
  • Callaway Blue
  • Melwood Springs
  • Sparkle Springs
  • Balance Water
  • AquaMantra
  • Ritual Cleanse
  • Project 7
  • Earth Water
  • Quantum Health Beverage
  • Nordstroms Department Stores
  • Life Ionizers
  • Pacific Caps
  • Texas Rain
  • Highland Premium
  • Ogallala Water
  • McClellan Mountain Spring Water
  • Crystal Falls
  • Green Solutions (PP and PE food storage containers)
  • Oasis Water
  • Natures Purest
  • Clarepak

Reusable Shopping Bags Not Risk Free

The newest fad: The Reusable bag .




Reusable bags are being greatly pushed against the single use plastic bag and people seem to be latching on to the concept. It sounds like a good enough idea, and with all the design options you can really expressive yourself, but is the reusable bag really risk free? Just like many new products there may be some drawbacks that weren’t discovered before becomingso popular and “savior-esque.” The Department of Soil, Water and Environmental Science at the University of Arizona and the School of Public Health at Loma Linda University conducted a study called the Assessment of the Potential for Cross Contamination of Food Products by Reusable Shopping Bags. Now I am going to brief you on the results of this study!

So what is “Cross contamination” ?

Cross contamination occurs when disease-causing microorganisms are transferred from one food to another.

The assessment was divided into 3 Phases

1. Determine the occurrence of bacteria and bacteria of health concern in reusable shopping bags
2. Determine the potential for microbial cross-contamination in reusable shopping bags
3. Evaluate and recommend the washing/bleaching procedures necessary to decontaminate reusable shopping bags

They started off by collecting bags from consumers entering grocery stores in the San Francisco Bay area, Los Angeles and Tucson, Arizona. 84 bags total were collected, 25 from LA, 25 from San Francisco and 34 from Tucson. All but 4 of these bags were woven polypropylene (a little softer than polyester which is what a typical plastic bottle is made out of.) Each bag owner was interviewed on bag usage, storage, and cleaning procedures. (4 unused reusable bags were also purchased and tested)

 

And the Results are in…

Large numbers of bacteria were found in all but 1 bag & coliform bacteria in half.

E-Coli was identified in 12% of the bags & a wide range of enteric bacteria & pathogens.

After meat juices were added to bags & stored in car s for 2 hours, bacteria increased 10-fold.

 

 

How to Clean your bags?

Hand or machine washing was found to reduce the bacteria in bags by >99.9%. So if you clean your bag after every separate use, you should be good! (Don’t forget to think of the water and energy that adds up over time)

 

What were the bag owners habits?

Cleaned bag at home?
97% No
3% Yes

Days bags were used in a Week?
49% 1 day
22% 2 days
18% 3 days
3% 4 days
2% 5 days
3% 6 days
3% 7 days

Bag used Soley for Groceries?
70% Yes
30% No

Other uses of Bag?
57% Other Shopping
19% Clothes
10% Books
9% Snacks
5% Biking Supplies

Separate Bags for Meats & Vegetables?
75% No
25% Yes

Transport in Car?
55% Trunk
45% Backseat

Stored at home?
55% Yes
45% No

 

As you are learning these bags get pretty filthy and are brought back into stores, which is proven to be not at all sanitary. So if reusable bag users do not make the continuous effort to keep their bags clean maybe this isn’t  the cleanest solution to the single-use plastic bag problem, why not explore another option like using Earth friendly  biodegradable and recyclable plastic instead, Like ENSO?

Take a few min to read the rest of the assessment it’s definitely worth your time!
http://www.llu.edu/public-health/news/news-grocery-bags-bacteria.page

 

 

Labeling is a part of Education

 

 

With all of the amazing efforts to create products that push toward a more green disposal process consumers are being left holding the product and feeling a little unsure  just how to dispose of it. This is due to a lack of understanding terminology and a lack of           clear labeling on the products. The first product that comes to mind when I think of this topic is Sun Chips. According to the Sun Chips website they have the first 100% compostable chip bag. There website includes a section called “Composting 101” that explains the process of disposal that can be found here Compostable Packaging 101 – Sun Chips

This is great but what do the actual bags tell you to do? On the back of the Sun Chips bag it states that in about 13 weeks there will be a “breakdown into compost in a hot, active home or industrial compost pile”  it then states “Don’t compost yet? Learn more about our bag, what it’s made of and how to compost effectively at www.SunChips.com”  The bag is vague and pushes consumers to visit their website to actually learn how to dispose of it. There’s nothing wrong with this but if you are driving in your car on a road trip you may find it tempting to just chunk the bag in the garbage rather than holding on to it until you get home so you can visit the website and learn how to compost it. If the labeling on the back of the bag just gave the instructions I think consumers would see that the whole process is so simple.

By making consumers go visit your website it seems like there is too much information to include on the bag and that can seem daunting to a consumer. We live in a world where people want instant information at their fingertips. Why not just include the instructions on the labeling of the bag?  This blog is not picking on Sun Chips but simply just recognizing that if companies were to label products more clearly we as consumers would know just how to dispose of the products instead of just giving up because we do not understand.

 

Here are some key terms you should know to help you better understand all those labels out there.

 

Industrial composting refers to large scale composting systems that are being used more commonly as an alternative to landfills. Here is a short video that will show you an example industrial composting. More info here

Home composting refers to a process that can be done in most backyards in a homemade or manufactured compost bin or even an open pile. The bins should include 4 ingredients: nitrogen, carbon, water and air.  For more details on home composting visit this site More info here

Biodegradation refers to when plastic or any other material degrades over a period of time.  Biodegradation can occur in either aerobic (with oxygen) or anaerobic (without oxygen) environments.

ENSO plastics do not begin to biodegrade until the plastic is placed into a highly microbial environment i.e. landfill.  Once placed in a microbial environment the ENSO additive has a microbial attractant to help facilitate microbial colonization. Once microbes have colonized on the plastic they digest the additive which causes the production of specific enzymes within the microbes. These enzymes are the key to plastic biodegradation. The microbes break down the resulting material through atomic reorganization to use some of the atoms as energy and leaves behind either methane (anaerobic) or CO2 (aerobic) and inert humus.  Having the plastic biodegrade from microbial digestion is the natural process of everything and does not leave behind any polymer residue or toxic materials.

Degradation can be initiated by oxygen, ultra violet light or heat.  In many cases these products begin to degrade the moment they are manufactured which leads to a shortened useful life. When something is degradable it means the plastic is only broken down or fragments into smaller and smaller pieces and will never completely disappear.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Coke joint venture shuts down PET plant

 

SPARTANBURG, S.C. (Updated April 22, 10:40 a.m. ET) — The joint-venture PET recycling plant that Coca-Cola Co. opened with great fanfare two years ago in Spartanburg, S.C., has stopped making food-grade recycled PET, but hopes to resume that process sometime this summer.

Neither Coke nor United Resource Recovery Corp. LLC ever made any official announcement about the shutdown of those operations at their joint venture plant, NURRC LLC. Only after Plastics News broke the story April 18 that 50 factory workers were laid off in early March, and virtually the entire office staff was laid off two weeks ago did Coke issue a statement to PN that operations had been “curtailed.”

In an email response, the Coca-Cola executive only said that Coke was restructuring the Spartanburg joint venture, which was designed to be the largest bottle-to-bottle PET recycling plant globally. Vitters is general manager of the Plant Bottle packaging platform for Coca-Cola. He was previously director of sustainable packaging.

In a separate statement sent specifically to Plastics News, the Atlanta-based company said “we cannot discuss the specifics of Coca-Cola’s business dealing with NURRC. The joint venture, however, needs to be restructured in light of further business conditions.”

Without providing additional detail, the statement said that “plans are in place to continue to operate” the Spartanburg facility. Similarly, Vitters said “we intend to continue working with processing facilities, throughout the U.S., including NURCC, to supply [recycled] PET to our system.”

There was no immediate response from URRC to inquiries from Plastics News.

Sources also said that NURRC is remiss in its payments to its brokers and materials recovery facilities, and that at least one lawsuit has been filed by a supplier of PET bottles seeking payment. They also said that several NURRC staff employees have been actively inquiring about job possibilities at other plastic recyclers.

In addition, John Burgess, president of Coca-Cola Recycling, has been placed on indefinite leave, sources said. But Vitters said that personnel action was not related to the Spartanburg recycling operation.

The Spartanburg plant had been ballyhooed as the shining star that would enable Coke to achieve its goal of incorporating 10 percent recycled content in its PET bottles by last year and 25 percent by 2015.

But Coke did not meet that goal of 10 percent recycled content for its PET bottles in 2010, and sources said that only about 1 million pounds of recycled PET from the NURRC Spartanburg plant — which is only a fraction of the plant’s nameplate capacity of 56 million pounds — actually wound up back in PET bottles.

“I have heard for a long time that the plant could not meet the specifications for bottles,” said one source.

“Coca-Cola remains committed to our goals of sourcing 25 percent of our PET plastic from recycled and/or renewable material by 2015, and to recover 50 percent of the equivalent bottles and cans used by 2015,” said the company in the statement it emailed to Plastics News.

The “recycled and/or renewable materials” is significant, because Coke has been making a big push in recent months in renewable materials. The company has said it expects to convert all of its plastics packaging to PlantBottle materials — PET made from sugar-cane ethanol — by 2020.

Sources said the Spartanburg plant had undergone three engineering redesigns in an effort to make its process profitable.

“The technology might have been the best several years ago, but it doesn’t work as well as other technologies with the newer, lightweight bottles,” one source said.

In its emailed statement to Plastics News, Coca-Cola’s only comment relative to the technology at the plant was that “new equipment” was being installed.

“We started this joint venture with URRC to test out technology that would increase access to valuable recycled content for use back into our bottles. That desire has not changed.”

The plant never added the second line that it had planned to bring online by the end of 2009 or early 2010, and it struggled to achieve its nameplate capacity of 56 million pounds — 44 million pounds of clear material and 12 million pounds of green material.

Coke’s initial investment in the plant was estimated to be between $45 million and $50 million.

One source said the majority of the plant’s output ended up in lower-end fiber and strapping. The source said one Coke bottling plant had two silos worth of output from the plant that was unusable for bottles.

“In the long-run, it has to work in the marketplace,” said one source. “Its failure is kind of a black eye for Coke.”

The NURRC plant closing is a short-term boost to other recyclers, as it makes more material available in a tight market to PET recyclers such as Clear Path Recycling, Custom Polymers PET, Wellman, Pure Tech Plastics, Phoenix Technologies, Carbonlite Industries, and others.

“That is good news,” for those companies, the source said. It also helped PET bale prices — which had been rising — stabilize in March.

Before the NURRC plant closing, PET reclamation in the U.S. was expected to reach 1.88 billion pounds sometime in 2011. That’s more than double the 847 million-pound PET reclamation capacity at the end of 2008. And tight supplies had already forced the cancellation of three capacity expansions this year, including a second 120 million-pound-per-year line planned by Clear Path.

Sources said the NURRC plant closing was triggered by a request in February for $15 million from Coke to fund the next phase of expansion. NURRC wanted to add a second recycling line to increase production.

When Coke declined to make that investment, that left NURRC without money to continue operations, sources said.

URRC, which owns the joint-venture plant, is looking for investors, sources said. However, other sources speculated that Coke may buy the plant at a greatly reduced price.

One source told Plastics News that Coca-Cola Recycling employees were told in an internal memo that the Coca-Cola Recycling was going to take over NURRC.

“Everything about this plant from Coke has been totally greenwash nonsense from top-to-bottom from Day One,” said one source.

Coca-Cola still has PET recycling plants in Mexico, France, Austria, Switzerland and the Philippines.

By Mike Verespej | PlasticNews.com

ENSO Expanding Distributor Program

 

Almost everyone has a successful friend or a relative who became successful by getting in on the ground floor of a trendsetting sales organization. How did these folks know when to be at the right place at the right time? They recognized opportunity and acted swiftly.

In just the last few weeks ENSO has increased worldwide presence by awarding Authorized Distributorship status in 10 new countries. The door upon which opportunity knocks doesn’t stay open for long. Would you be intrigued if I told you that there is still room on the ground floor at ENSO and a huge opportunity exists for YOU today?

ENSO is actively seeking Distributors who are ready to leverage exclusive rights to market, distribute and sell ENSO technology domestically and in more than 100 countries abroad. Is your organization prepared to manage the sales, logistics and inventory for an entire nation or region? Are YOU an entrepreneur who recognizes “… the right place at the right time”? If so, email us today. We’d like to discuss this exciting opportunity with you.

Contact Us:
sales@ensoplastics.com

Compostables Trial at Municipal Yard Trimmings Operation

Article was written by Paige Hailey at City of San Diego Miramar Greenery

ESTABLISHED in the mid-1980s, the Miramar Greenery composting facility currently operates on 75 acres in the City of San Diego, California. The facility annually processes over 100,000 tons of organic
material. In the past decade, the city’s Environmental Services Department (ESD) launched a food scrap composting program to service large, local commercial institutions (e.g., public venues, stadiums) at
the Greenery.

Source separated food scraps are delivered to the Greenery and unloaded into a horseshoe-shaped barrier of ground yard trimmings. The load is mixed with those trimmings and placed into an open window. After 10 weeks of turning and watering, the material is screened into half-inch compost, 2- inch mulch and 4-inch overs using a Komptech XL star screen. The 11 regular participants in the food scrap program contribute approximately 2,500 tons/year of food scraps.

Each generator receives extensive training at their site and a 6-month trial before being accepted as a regular participant. Two of the existing participants are the San Diego Earth Fair and the San Diego County Fair. Various other zero waste events in the city are accommodated as well.

Unlike many composting facilities, the Greenery does not preprocess, shred or grind food scraps before incorporating them into windrows. The Greenery also does not accept any incoming organic material in bags, whether traditional plastic or compostable. Bags inhibit the staffs ability to easily identify contamination. These two operational variables contribute to the structure of the entire food scrap composting program.

INITIATING THE TRIAL

In anticipation of receiving more participants in the food composting program, the ESD decided to initiate a compostable products trial. Many prospective participants expressed interest in single-use compostable products; however, past feedback from Greenery operations staff indicated that these products did not typically breakdown in the city’s composting process. The goal of the study was to verify if compostable products degrade in the Greenery’s composting process and also to identify tableware products that would be accepted in food scrap loads.

The project began with market research and selection of 105 different compostable products to test. Selection was based on suggestions from current and prospective food scrap program participants as well as local availability, diversification of uses, cost and an assortment of material composition. Materials in the selected products included plastic (such as polylactic acid (PLA), starchbased polymers and blended resins), paper, paper with linings, bagasse, wood and pressed leaves. The majority of the products selected meet American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) standards (either ASTM D6868 or ASTM D6400 standards for biodegradability and compostability), and many have Biodegradable Products Institute (BPI) certification. However, some products that have not undergone ASTM evaluation were intentionally tested as well. All of the products were bought off the shelf or through websites in January 2010.

An item number was assigned to each product and individual portfolios were created. Information in the portfolio included manufacturer identification number (UPC or SKU), brand and manufacturer, material or resin type, supplier, certifications and standards met. The portfolio also included photographs of each product, initial measurements, and a detailed description.

EXPERIMENT DESIGN AND RESULTS

Mesh onion bags were used to contain the samples and compost feedstock – approximately 30 percent compostable/ biodegradable products and 70 percent active compost (food scraps and yard trimmings) by volume. Each bag held three to four samples of a given product with an average of three to five product types equaling a total of 15 to 20 items per bag.

To expose materials to the most ideal composting conditions, the bags were placed in the center of an active composting windrow. After the first week, with temperatures hovering around 145°F, the bags were removed and the windrow was aerated using a Scarab turner. The contents of the bags were emptied, sifted through, and the samples were individually evaluated for decomposition. The evaluation included photographs, measurements and a detailed description of each product. Particular attention was given to any changes in color, texture, size and fragmentation. After evaluation, the bags were reconstituted using the same feedstock and placed back in the center of the windrow. The bags were removed from the windrow and samples evaluated once every two weeks over the 10 week study.

The final time the bags were removed, all sample fragments were collected and each item’s final measurement was taken. Each product portfolio was analyzed and then classified into five categories of degradation depending on the percentage of decomposition: 0 to 24 percent, 25 to 49 percent, 50 to 74 percent, 75 to 99 percent, and 100 percent. For example, if a product’s remaining measurement was greater than 80 percent of the original, then the product degraded less than 75 percent and it was categorized as a 0 to 24 percent biodegradation rate.

The results of the study are summarized in Table 1. More than half of the 105 products did not biodegrade greater than 25 percent! Four products degraded between 25 to 74 percent, three products degraded between 75 to 99 percent, and 37 of the 105 products completely degraded.
Further analysis of the data determined the majority of the 37 products that completely biodegraded were made of PLA. In fact, 26 of those were comprised of pure PLA (i.e. PLA without the inclusion of any additives for desired plastic characteristics such as strength, malleability or heat resistance). On the other hand, all the other material types tested had very inconsistent results. For example, seven bagasse products, from a variety of manufacturers, completely degraded; however, 20 other bagasse products did not. None of the compostable cutlery showed any real sign of degradation.
All wooden and leaf items partially degraded, which is comparable to the rate of biodegradation of small branches or woody matter in the windrow.

Ultimately, the city’s results indicate that there was no consistent pattern of biodegradation in the materials tested (other than the items of pure PLA).

The results of this study led to a decision to hold off accepting any type of compostable products at the Greenery as routine feedstocks. Two components of the results factored strongly into this decision: 1) the unpredictable degradation rates of the materials; and 2) the obvious lack of degradation by the majority of the products tested in the Greenery’s composting process. It should be noted, however, that our testing methodology necessitated removal of the compostable item prior to each windrow’s turning with the Scarab. In actuality, several of these products would likely have decomposed more completely if they were subjected to the mechanical forces of the compost turner agitating the pile.
In conclusion, this study is not the end of the Greenery’s relationship with compostable products, but rather the beginning. Although the above results may be extrapolated to indicate what might happen in a static aerated pile composting system, the actual conditions at the Greenery were not mimicked. The ESD is now moving to limited actual testing of products in the agitated windrow process to determine how much a factor the test conditions (i.e. isolating products in onion sacks) were in retarding degradation. From June 15 to July 5, 31 tons of post and preconsumer food waste from the San Diego County Fair complete with paper plates, wax coated paper cups and PLA cold cups – were accepted. Stay tuned for more results! To read the full article click me!

This Valentine’s Day Give Your Sweetheart a redleaf

This Valentine’s Day, instead of chocolate and diamonds, give your sweethearts something they’ll really love: redleaf water in their new BIO BOTTLE. The BIO BOTTLE is a first of its kind: a recyclable and biodegradable bottle developed by ENSO Bottles.

“We’re thrilled to have redleaf water using ENSO biodegradable bottles. Working together with redleaf is going to have a huge impact on helping the environment. It is only natural that a genuine display of commitment and corporate responsibility has magnetized the redleaf brand”

Earth-conscious consumers have long embraced redleaf’s unique high oxygen, mineral rich water to quench thirst and refresh their body. redleaf‘s passion to improve the environment is reflected in the design of its facility that boasts no water waste during bottling.

“redleaf’s mission is to provide our Ultra-Premium Canadian water in guilt-free BIO BOTTLES – and now that has become a reality!” said redleaf COO Dave Hillis. By embracing biodegradable technology from ENSO, redleaf is giving consumers the opportunity to take responsibility for a healthier earth.

redleaf’s BIO BOTTLE is a step in the right direction to further reduce the impact that empty water bottles have on the environment. Now consumers can recycle like they always have, but if an empty BIO BOTTLE ends up in a landfill it will biodegrade naturally, like any other organic matter.

“We’re thrilled to have redleaf water using ENSO biodegradable bottles. Working together with redleaf is going to have a huge impact on helping the environment. It is only natural that a genuine display of commitment and corporate responsibility has magnetized the redleaf brand,” said Danny Clark, President of ENSO.

redleaf is sweeping across the Mountain West Region of the U.S. and can be found in major grocery stores such as Fry’s, Albertsons, and Bashas’ as well as several prestigious American athletic events, including Los Angeles Angels and Oakland Athletics Spring Training.

About ENSO Bottles

ENSO Bottles, based in Phoenix, Arizona, is an environmental company dedicated to creating “Bottles for a Healthier Earth.” ENSO bottles are designed to be recycled or if thrown away, biodegrade naturally. Learn more about reducing plastic pollution and improving our environment at ensobottles.com.

About redleaf water

redleaf is North America’s only ultra-premium bottled water. It starts with great water from a naturally renewable source in the Canadian Rockies and is made better through a state-of-the-art purification and bottling process. It is the industry’s most advanced way for making great tasting, healthy water. For more information, visit redleafwater.com.

ENSO has joined the IBWA (International Bottled Water Association)

International Bottled Water AssociationThe IBWA is highly recognized throughout the world as the most influential body in the world of bottled water. Last month, ENSO joined forces with this highly recognized association to assist in educating the water bottle industry of biodegradable additive use and the safety of using the ENSO additive as a next step forward in the industry towards environmentally responsible plastics. Continue reading

Do you have blue barrel anxiety?

‘m suffering from “Blue Barrel Anxiety,” and so are a lot of other people around the country. What is BBA you ask? Think of it like this. You are cleaning up after a family picnic, the table is covered with paper plates, an empty pickle jar, a plastic mustard container and lots of other things made from plastic and paper…lots of other things. If you have ever wondered, does this go in the trash or recycle bin, then you have experienced what millions of us have, the dreaded BBA, “Blue Barrel Anxiety.”

I was suffering so badly from BBA that I didn’t know what to toss into my blue bin…Blue Barrrel AnxietyI’d even gotten a letter from my trash collection company warning me that I was about to lose my Blue Barrel privileges. Don’t be disheartened, I’ve discovered the cure for BBA. It turns out that by educating oneself, BBA can be reduced and more importantly for me, no more letters.

I set up a tour to my local recycling center. WARNING and DISCLAIMER: Prepare yourself, seeing firsthand what becomes of the things you put into your recycle bin may shock you. Perhaps you might consider taking a friend or the entire family for moral support. You’re going to need it.

How did my tour go? Well it wasn’t what I expected. The facility I went to gave the tour from an enclosed area where we observed the process through glass windows. We didn’t hear much of the noise or enjoy the smells. The room we were in was equipped with a room deodorizer that periodically shot a mist on the air which covered up any noxious odors. I wondered what was in the deodorizer and why suddenly I was feeling a lot of love for all those recyclers working the picking line, hmmmmm.

Anyway… the thing that got most my attention was the amount of “recycled” items that aren’t recycled. A lot of the stuff…most of the stuff, we put into our recycle bins isn’t recycled, it is disposed of in the landfill. I was a little taken aback and somewhat hurt that all the plastic, cans, and containers that I had rinsed and carefully placed into my recycle bin were being treated like garbage and I was wondering why?

The tour guide must have seen the questions in my eyes…I heard the mister spray again and the love return. The tour guide went on to explain that recycling, while being good for the environment is in the final analysis a business activity. Items we toss that don’t have market value are stored or sent on to the landfill. Most of what I saw being saved was plastic containers and cardboard, so I assumed most of the unwanted material became garbage. The tour guide went on to say, “When something has value or there is a market for a recycled item it is captured, bundled and sold.” I pointed out a bin filled with glass bottles and I asked our tour guide why they weren’t recycled? His answer was that it’s cheaper to make new glass than recycle. I was becoming educated and my BBA was starting to ease. I learned that recycling is about money, at least here in the U.S. it is, and until there is a demand for recycled glass or the price of virgin glass goes up….it’s off to garbage land with used glass.

Reclycing BinsIt turns out that U.S. Recyclers are very picky about what they want and are only willing to spend the time, labor and money on items that can easily and quickly be captured from the recycle stream. In other countries recycling has taken on a whole new meaning. I recently read about another country where even a tennis shoe is dismantled for the metal, leather and rubber. Is that cost effective? Probably not, but those countries are coming closer to a sustainable life style than we are. The tour was an eye opener and it got me to questioning if there was any real value to recycling here in the U.S., or was it all just a way to make money, appearing to be environmental?

Organizations that promote and support recycling here in the U.S. need to do more toward developing new markets for the goods we now toss into our landfills. Most of their efforts are spent on maintaining the status quo of recycling and they don’t take kindly to anyone rocking the garbage boat.

Public awareness and acceptance for environmental programs continues to grow and recycling organizations need to embrace environmentalism and its potential benefits. The U.S. needs to follow the lead of countries that have successful recycling programs, programs that are reclaiming up to 75% of waste materials. Recyclers need to get away from the idea that recycling is just a for-profit business and begin to look at recycling as the anchor for all our environmental programs.

Use, reuse, recycle and reclaiming are all about sustainability; it should become the mantra of all businesses and consumers. We need to rethink how our products and packaging are designed, used and when the life of a product is over how the resource is reclaimed. Sustainability is important for our future and it’s the only way we will be able to ensure a healthy planet and that resources will be available for future generations.

Blue Barrel Anxiety
by
Max Clark