Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa has announced that the city of Los Angeles, in tandem with the Vernon Hills, ill.-based Carton Council, is launching an initiative to recycle liquid food and beverage cartons as part of its curbside recycling program.
Through the new program, residences will place empty cartons, such as those used to package milk, juice, soup and broth, soy milk and wine, in their recycling bins.
The Carton Council, which was formed by formed by four of the country's leading carton manufacturers—Elopak, Evergreen Packaging, SIG Combibloc and Tetra Pak—says Los Angeles will be the largest of the more than 200 California cities that have carton recycling programs in place.
According to the Carton Council, the initiative will add no additional costs or hassles for residents and will serve 750,000 single-family households and more than 400,000 multi-family units in the city.
As of the first of this year, the Carton Council says its Carton Recycling Access Campaign has reached nearly 35 million households.
Latest from Recycling Today
- US Steel to restart Illinois blast furnace
- AISI, Aluminum Association cite USMCA triangular trading concerns
- Nucor names new president
- DOE rare earths funding is open to recyclers
- Design for Recycling Resolution introduced
- PetStar PET recycling plant expands
- Iron Bull addresses scrap handling needs with custom hoppers
- REgroup, CP Group to build advanced MRF in Nova Scotia