BestBuy may recycle but they are one of the least green companies in existence when you consider what they sell.
Here is one really green company - Starbucks. It is actually in Starbucks vested interest to avoid global warming as it would cause global coffee bean prices to skyrocket. As such they have always had a very forward-thinking environmental policy. They even fund footprint analysis of their stores to find ways to reduce footprint wherever possible. http://www.starbucks.com/aboutus/envaffairs.asp
-
Oct 7th, 2007 10:33 PM #1
List of companies that recycle
I'll start the first post by listing
Dominion supermarkets: plastic bags
IKEA: batteries, light bulbs (not sure if all light bulbs)
Bestbuy: old CD's/DVD's, batteries, portable DVD players, cell phones, ink cartridges
http://www.bestbuy.ca/marketing/recy...gon=&langid=EN
Reply With Quote
LOG IN TO THANK
No one has yet thanked jayk for this post.
-
Sponsored Links - Join the RedFlagDeals.com community and remove this ad.
-
Oct 7th, 2007 11:06 PM #2
Last edited by brunes; Oct 7th, 2007 at 11:08 PM.
Reply With Quote
LOG IN TO THANK
No one has yet thanked brunes for this post.
-
Oct 17th, 2007 03:42 PM #3
Reply With Quote
LOG IN TO THANK
No one has yet thanked jayk for this post.
-
Oct 17th, 2007 06:08 PM #4
Reply With Quote
LOG IN TO THANK
No one has yet thanked brunes for this post.
-
Oct 17th, 2007 11:27 PM #5
Reply With Quote
LOG IN TO THANK
No one has yet thanked jayk for this post.
-
Oct 18th, 2007 07:32 AM #6Member


- Join Date
- Aug 9th, 2007
- Location
- St. Catharines, ON
- Posts
- 291
MEC has recently started a program to collect polyester based clothes and recycle them. I think if the clothes are still in decent order then they just donate them though.
http://www.mec.ca/Main/content_text....=1192710720999
Patagonia has been recyling their capline clothes for a while too. Though I'm not sure how you would get these clothes to them from Canada. Probobly best just to drop them off at MEC.
Reply With Quote
LOG IN TO THANK
No one has yet thanked granite_grrl for this post.
-
Oct 18th, 2007 07:36 AM #7Member


- Join Date
- Aug 9th, 2007
- Location
- St. Catharines, ON
- Posts
- 291
BTW - I believe that MEC also has a battery recycling program in place and has switched over to biodegadable bags as well (I will comment that the Halifax store had not as of last xmas, but I hope they have by now).
Reply With Quote
LOG IN TO THANK
No one has yet thanked granite_grrl for this post.
-
Oct 22nd, 2007 08:39 PM #8
Reply With Quote
LOG IN TO THANK
No one has yet thanked Grassgreen for this post.
-
Oct 23rd, 2007 03:58 PM #9
Reply With Quote
LOG IN TO THANK
No one has yet thanked chiumanji for this post.
-
Oct 23rd, 2007 05:53 PM #10
Reply With Quote
LOG IN TO THANK
No one has yet thanked Impossibles for this post.
-
Oct 23rd, 2007 05:56 PM #11
Reply With Quote
LOG IN TO THANK
No one has yet thanked Impossibles for this post.
-
Oct 23rd, 2007 06:41 PM #12
To me this is a strawman. argument. You may use slightly more energy / unit to make paper cups than styrofoam cups, but
- Recycling paper cups takes less energy than styrofoam cups, and there are more facilities available
- Paper cups biodegrade, foam never does
- Wood is a renewable resource. Oil is not
- Energy can come from clean, renewable sources. Oil can not.
- Lots of landfills incinerate their trash. Doing so with styrofoam releases all kinds of nasty gases. not with paper.
In the end, booster Juice is just taking the cheaper option. If it was better for the environment to use styrofoam, Starbucks would be doing so, because they're cheaper to get than paper cups.
Reply With Quote
LOG IN TO THANK
No one has yet thanked brunes for this post.
-
Oct 24th, 2007 07:56 AM #13Member


- Join Date
- Aug 9th, 2007
- Location
- St. Catharines, ON
- Posts
- 291
What? Then why do they say this:
Where are you getting your information from?How does it work?
When you have an item of polyester clothing that's no longer useful, bring it to your local MEC store. (Clean it first, please!)
We accept any of the following with a 90% or greater polyester content:
MEC™
Polartec® (any brand)
Eco Circle™ (any brand)
Patagonia® Common Threads Recycling Program garments
Reply With Quote
LOG IN TO THANK
No one has yet thanked granite_grrl for this post.
-
Oct 24th, 2007 12:02 PM #14
Reply With Quote
LOG IN TO THANK
No one has yet thanked jayk for this post.
Search Forums

