Loop: Consumer Coup or Pig in Lipstick?
Loop: Consumer Coup or Pig in Lipstick?
There's a new eco-shopping service in town! Or rather, there soon may be, especially if you live in New York or Paris. It's called Loop, and it's aimed at consumers who are sick of wasteful, single use containers.Here's the premise. The grocery items we buy are often packaged in disposable plastic containers, whether it's deodorant or pints of Häagen-Dazs. That plastic piles up over time and through the actions of millions (or, nowadays, billions) of consumers. China won't take any more recyclables, oceans are choked with plastic waste, and something's gotta give. Tom Szaky, the founder and CEO of TerraCycle, Inc., thought that single-use plastic packaging was an idea past its sell-by date. Szaky partnered with major brands to develop packaging that can be reused, ideally, a hundred times. Loop, a new shopping platform, is the result of these efforts, and media outlets from TreeHugger to The Wall Street Journal think he's on to something big.But is he?Szaky's heart is certainly in the right place. He started TerraCycle in 2001 after visiting some friends over fall break at Princeton. Seeing his friends cycle their kitchen scraps through their worm bin and use the castings to fertilize their houseplants gave Szaky the idea to commercialize the nutrient loop. He emptied his bank account, maxed out his credit cards, and borrowed money from family and friends to build giant worm bins to digest waste from Princeton's cafeteria. Then he filled used soda bottles with the resulting liquid, hoping to market it as a natural fertilizer. A quick cash infusion from an angel investor enabled him to go commercial in 2004, even though it was beyond difficult to find other backers willing to fund a business that made its product from waste.
TerraCycle CEO and Loop partner Tom Szaky in 2014. Photo by Christopher Crane, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. CC BY-SA 2.0
Sources:
Loop unveiled: Global CPGs embrace transformative circular shopping platform
Big brands revisit the milkman model to cut plastic pollution
Major brands commit to selling products in refillable containers
A coalition of giant brands is about to change how we shop forever, with a new zero-waste platform
How to solve the world’s plastics problem: Bring back the milk man
The World’s Biggest Brands Want You to Refill Your Orange Juice and Deodorant
TerraCycle History
Worm poo in plastic bottles: Get rich and save the world
How We Solve for Waste
Sponsor of legislation to end Michigan’s bottle deposit law says it is hurting overall recycling rates
Record private jet flights into Davos as leaders arrive for climate talk
The Real Junk Food Project turns supermarket waste into tasty meals
Nationwide, communities are discontinuing recycling programs
The Milkman Returneth (Glass Bottles, Bow Tie and All)
About Dawn Allen
Dawn Allen is a freelance writer and editor who is passionate about sustainability, political economy, gardening, traditional craftwork, and simple living. She and her husband are currently renovating a rural homestead in southeastern Michigan.