Recycling the un-recyclable

We live in a world where many of the products we use for convenience and food safety – everything from potato chip bags to shampoo bottles – are, surprisingly, not recyclable through normal means.

Potato chip bags, for example, are actually made from a combination of aluminum and plastics, and separating those elements into recyclable materials is not cost-effective just yet. Same thing with those plastic coffee K-cups. Same thing with sauce packets.

Now there are companies who try to recycle these materials, and are working on ways to make the recycling costs drop while finding new uses for the extracted materials – creating everything from sunglass frames to building bricks.

Of course, now I’m thinking about all those packets of Doritos and Fritos I’ve consumed over the years. Heck, there’s probably a landfill with my own dedicated section thanks to my contributions.

So I looked online for anything that would allow me to recycle things like potato chip bags. And in doing so, I came across this website for TerraCycle.

TerraCycle partners with major companies to help recycle various products. You save the wrappers and labels and packaging, and once you have a reasonable amount, you log into a TerraCycle account, print a free shipping label, and send the waste away. TerraCycle and their partners will separate out the recyclable products and materials, which can be used for new products and materials. Easy peasy.

And the list of companies participating in this program actually makes me want to use them, as I now feel that if those products can be recycled, I’m not causing my carbon footprint to stomp all over nature. Head & Shoulders shampoo, for example, has a program with TerraCycle. So does Bimbo Bakeries, the company that produces Freihofer’s and Entemann’s baked goods. Those fifteen sauce packets you get from Taco Bell? TerraCycle can take them.

As for the potato chip and snack bags, currently TerraCycle takes Takis chips, but surely the product line will increase over time.

I don’t know about you … but this intrigues me. And as I said before, I’m more willing to buy products whose packaging I KNOW can be recycled, rather than just hoping that when I toss the container away, somehow the product will evolve away from my sight.

So if this interests you at all … definitely take a look at the TerraCycle website and see what is available in your neck of the woods.