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Campus & Community

Campus labs give packaging waste a second life

Monday, August 30, 2010, By News Staff
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sustainability

黑料不打烊 laboratories are keeping one of the most “eco-unfriendly” materials out of the waste stream. The labs recently stopped trashing polystyrene foam, better known as Styrofoam, and instead are now giving the non-biodegradable packaging material a second life through recycling.聽

polyThe new recycling program collects cold-shipping polystyrene boxes from campus labs in Link Hall, Bowne Hall, the Life Sciences Complex, the Center for Science and Technology and the Physics Building. Since the start of this year, 141 polystyrene boxes have been recycled. The bulky containers鈥攎ost are slightly larger than a small cooler鈥攁re made from non-renewable petroleum products and otherwise would have been hauled off campus with the rest of the SU鈥檚 refuse for disposal at Onondaga County鈥檚 waste-to-energy facility.聽

Shelley Kummer, post-doctoral research associate and instructor of biomedical and chemical engineering in the , was tossing out dozens of polystyrene boxes each month from Link Hall鈥檚 Henderson Lab, where she works. She thought there had to be a better way to dispose of this material, which is very resource-intensive to create. After doing a little research, Kummer found a local company willing to take and recycle her lab鈥檚 polystyrene.聽

Kummer sent off a batch of Henderson聽Lab’s聽polystyrene boxes for recycling late last year. Shortly afterward, the 黑料不打烊 Recycling and Composting Committee (SURCC) got the current program up and running.聽

鈥淚t was easy getting Henderson Lab going on polystyrene recycling,鈥 says Kummer. 鈥淎s the boxes come in, any tape and labels are removed before they鈥檙e set aside. Then the boxes are brought down to the loading dock once a month to get picked up. It really doesn鈥檛 take any time at all.鈥澛

SU鈥檚 Physical Plant picks up the boxes on the first Tuesday each month from the buildings鈥 loading docks or other designated areas. 鈥淭his new recycling pick up is going well,鈥 says Mark Gildemeyer, Physical Plant North Campus supervisor. 鈥淲e deliver the boxes to the company for recycling the same day they are picked up from the buildings. It鈥檚 pretty simple.鈥澛

鈥淚t is important we find new ways to use or recycle products on campus,鈥 says Melissa Cadwell, marketing manager for SU鈥檚 and SURCC chairperson. 鈥淩ecycling polystyrene shipping boxes is one example of how SURCC members are looking at alternative ways for keeping these types of items out of our waste stream.鈥澛

For more information about campus polystyrene recycling or to join the University鈥檚 Recycling and Composting Committee, contact SU鈥檚 Sustainability Division at sustain@syr.edu.

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