Reynolds subsidiary funding cigarette recycling

  • FILE - In this Tuesday, Feb. 1, 2011 file photo, Reynolds American cigarette brand American Spirit are on display at a liquor store in Palo Alto, Calif. A subsidiary of the nation's second-largest cigarette maker Reynolds American Inc. is funding a national recycling program to reward do-gooders for cleaning up tobacco waste and turn cigarette butts into pellets used to make items such as plastic shipping pallets, railroad ties and park benches. Photo: Paul Sakuma / AP
    FILE – In this Tuesday, Feb. 1, 2011 file photo,  Reynolds American cigarette brand American Spirit are on display at a liquor  store in Palo Alto, Calif. A subsidiary of the nation’s second-largest cigarette  maker Reynolds American Inc. is funding a national recycling program to reward  do-gooders for cleaning up tobacco waste and turn cigarette butts into pellets  used to make items such as plastic shipping pallets, railroad ties and park benches. Photo: Paul Sakuma / AP
    FILE – In this  Tuesday, Feb. 1, 2011 file photo, Reynolds American…

     

 

 

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) — A  subsidiary of the nation’s second-largest cigarette maker Reynolds  American Inc. is funding a national recycling program to reward do-gooders  for cleaning up tobacco waste and turn cigarette butts into pellets used to make  items such as plastic shipping pallets, railroad ties and park benches.

New Mexico-based Santa Fe  Natural Tobacco Co., the maker of Natural American Spirit cigarettes, is teaming  up with TerraCycle  Inc. for the program. It aims to snuff out one of the most littered items in the  U.S. that yields about 135 million pounds of cigarette butts annually and get  tossed on roadways, thrown in the trash or put in public ashtrays.

“You don’t have to walk or drive  very far to see that smokers often discard cigarette waste in ways that litter  the environment,” Santa Fe’s head of sales and marketing, Cressida  Lozano, said in a statement. The cost of the company’s sponsorship that will  be officially announced Thursday was not disclosed.

Through the Cigarette Waste  Brigade program, organizations as well as people over the age of 21 can collect  cigarette waste and send them to TerraCycle through a prepaid shipping label. Once received, participants  will get credits  that will be donated to Keep America Beautiful, a nonprofit community action and  education organization. They’ll receive about $1 per pound of litter, which  equals about 1,000 cigarette butts.

TerraCycle, based in Trenton,  N.J., will then recycle the filters into pellets used to make a number of items,  including ashtrays. The paper and tobacco also will be composted. The company  took nearly two years to develop the process to recycle cigarette butts, which  are comprised of paper, tobacco, ash, and a filter made from  cellulose acetate.

TerraCycle CEO and founder Tom  Szaky said the program provides a solution for the filters that are properly  disposed of in an ashtray or can, but still end up in a landfill.

Szaky said that the company is  committed to “recycling waste that others deem worthless or unsavory.” Recycling  cigarette litter will promote the idea that “everything can and should be  recycled,” he said.

Cigarette waste accounted for 38  percent of all U.S. roadway litter, according to a 2009 study done by Keep  America Beautiful.

The study also found that  cigarette butts were the most common litter item collected at sites including  retail areas, storm drains, loading docks, construction sites and  recreational areas.

Additionally, more than 1  million cigarettes or cigarette butts — enough to fill nearly 58,000 packs — were removed from American beaches and inland waterways in 2011 as part of the  Ocean Conservancy’s annual one-day International Coastal Cleanup. Cigarette  litter represented about 31 percent of the total debris collected, making it the  most-found item as part of those efforts.

“Trash is really too valuable to  toss, so we need to find alternative ways to up cycle and change trash and  repurpose it,” said Nicholas  Mallos, a marine debris specialist with group.

In 2003, Keep America Beautiful  launched a cigarette litter prevention program, and it has grown to include more  than 800 programs in 49 states and Washington, D.C. It was developed with  funding from the nation’s largest cigarette maker Philip  Morris USA, which is owned by Richmond, Va.-based Altria Group Inc. The  program also has received additional funding from Winston-Salem, N.C.-based  Reynolds American, maker of Camel and Pall Mall cigarettes.

The new cigarette program builds  on other recycling efforts by TerraCycle, which encourages consumers to collect  difficult-to-recycle materials through programs funded by companies within  specific industries. For example, Frito  Lay Inc. funds a program to recycle used chip bags and Kraft  Foods Inc. sponsors a program to collect plastic containers from dairy  products. For most programs, participants receive credits that can be donated to  various charities and causes.

 

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