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How ZeroTrash Initiatives Improve Workplace Culture and Attract Eco-Conscious Talent

How ZeroTrash Initiatives Improve Workplace Cul...

Tod Hardin

Plus, A 6-Step Approach to Implementing ZeroTrash Adoption Sustainability is no longer a side initiative managed quietly by facilities teams. It's a cultural signal. In today's workforce — especially among...

February 26, 2026 Tod Hardin

How ZeroTrash Initiatives Improve Workplace Culture and Attract Eco-Conscious Talent

Plus, A 6-Step Approach to Implementing ZeroTrash Adoption Sustainability is no longer a side initiative managed quietly by facilities teams. It's a cultural signal. In today's workforce — especially among Millennials and Gen Z — environmental responsibility influences where people choose to work, how long they stay, and how deeply they engage. ZeroTrash initiatives, including pre-recycling systems and soft plastic diversion programs, are emerging as powerful tools not just for waste reduction — but for strengthening workplace culture and attracting purpose-driven talent. Here's how. "ESG used to live in the boardroom. Now it lives in the break room. The shift we're seeing is that employees at every level want to feel that their employer is a force for good — not just profitable, but responsible. The organizations that understand this aren't just building better sustainability programs. They're building better cultures, and ultimately, better businesses." — Ivan Arbouzov, Founder & CEO, Clear Drop The Workforce Has Changed. Has Your Workplace Kept Up? A generation ago, a company's sustainability efforts rarely entered into a candidate's decision calculus. Today, they sit near the top. Among employed adults surveyed by Deloitte Consumer Center in March 2023 for its global State of the Consumer survey, 69% said they want their companies to invest in sustainability efforts, including reducing carbon, using renewable energy, and reducing waste. Additionally, according to Deloitte's 2025 Gen Z and Millennial Survey, 70% of younger workers say a company's environmental credentials are important when evaluating an employer. Nearly 15% have already left a job due to concerns about sustainability, and around 40% report rejecting job offers because a company's values did not align with their own. Perhaps most striking, nearly half of respondents say they have actively pressured their employers to take more meaningful action on environmental issues. Environmental stewardship consistently ranks among the top issues they care about. And critically, they can tell the difference between a company that genuinely walks the talk and one that simply checks a box on a CSR report. ZeroTrash initiatives — comprehensive programs designed to eliminate landfill-bound waste at the source — are becoming one of the clearest, most visible signals a company can send. Unlike solar panels on a distant rooftop or carbon offsets buried in a footnote, a ZeroTrash program plays out in the everyday experience of every employee. That visibility is what makes it powerful. What "ZeroTrash" Actually Means in Practice ZeroTrash isn't just about recycling. It's a systems-level commitment to rethinking how waste is generated, captured, and redirected before it ever reaches a landfill — and it represents one of the most effective waste reduction strategies available to businesses today. In practice, it typically includes: Pre-Recycling Systems — Choosing products and packaging upstream to minimize what needs to be disposed of in the first place. This might mean switching to compostable serviceware in a cafeteria, opting for bulk dispensers over single-use packaging, or partnering with vendors who take back their own materials. Soft Plastic Diversion Programs — One of the most overlooked waste streams in commercial recycling. Film plastics — plastic bags, wrap, pouches, shrink wrap — are notoriously difficult to recycle through conventional waste hauling services. Soft plastic diversion programs create dedicated collection pathways that route these materials to appropriate processors, keeping them out of landfills and the broader waste stream. Purpose-built tools like the Clear Drop Soft Plastic Compactor (SPC) are making this more practical for workplaces of all sizes — compressing loose film plastics into dense, shippable blocks that go directly to certified U.S. recycling facilities, with no sorting burden on employees. Learn more about soft plastic recycling challenges and solutions. Composting and Organics Diversion — Separating food scraps and organic materials from general waste dramatically reduces methane emissions from landfills. In workplace settings — break rooms, cafeterias, communal kitchens — this is often where landfill diversion efforts visibly stall, because food waste collection done poorly means odors, insects, and employee frustration. The Clear Drop Organics Collector (OC) addresses this directly, slowing microorganism growth and controlling odors so that organics diversion becomes something people actually want to participate in rather than avoid. Zero-to-Landfill Tracking — Measuring and reporting on waste diversion rates, giving employees and leadership a real, quantifiable picture of impact. For organizations serious about landfill reduction, this data becomes the backbone of ESG reporting and sustainability communications. Together, these systems create a workplace where sustainability isn't aspirational — it's operational. Why It Matters for Culture Culture is built from the accumulation of small signals. What gets celebrated. What gets resourced. What gets done even when no one is watching. When employees walk into a break room and see clearly labeled stations for compost, soft plastics, recycling, and landfill — and when those stations are actually maintained and working — they receive a clear message: this organization takes its values seriously enough to operationalize them. That message has downstream effects that go far beyond waste management for businesses. Shared purpose drives engagement. Employees who feel connected to a meaningful organizational mission are more productive, more loyal, and more likely to act as ambassadors for the company. ZeroTrash initiatives give teams something tangible to rally around — a visible, participatory sustainability effort they're a part of every single day. Visible action builds trust. One of the biggest drivers of employee disengagement is the perception that leadership talks about values without living them. A ZeroTrash program is hard to fake. The bins are either there or they're not. The diversion rates either go up or they don't. That operational transparency builds exactly the kind of institutional trust that retention depends on. Collective participation creates community. Sustainability programs that invite employee participation — waste audits, green team challenges, department-level diversion competitions — give people a reason to collaborate across silos. That cross-functional engagement strengthens relationships and improves the social fabric of the organization. The Talent Acquisition Angle Recruiting is increasingly a values conversation. Candidates research companies before they apply. They read Glassdoor reviews that mention sustainability. They look for ESG reports. They ask pointed questions in interviews about environmental commitments. A robust ZeroTrash initiative gives HR and recruiting teams something concrete to point to — not a vague "we care about the planet" statement, but a specific, documented commercial recycling and waste diversion program with measurable outcomes. Consider the competitive advantage this creates: In high-demand talent markets, two otherwise equivalent offers may come down to cultural fit and values alignment. A company that can demonstrate a genuine, operational commitment to sustainability — one that employees interact with daily — has a meaningful edge over one that cannot. For early-career candidates, this matters even more. Gen Z in particular applies a values filter early in their job search, and they're quick to identify greenwashing. A ZeroTrash initiative with real data behind it passes that test. "For a research organization like ours, credibility is everything. The people considering working with us, joining our team, or supporting our mission in Blue Hill want to see that we operate with integrity at every level. Diverting the soft plastics our laboratory generates away from landfill is one of the most concrete ways we can demonstrate that our environmental values aren't confined to our research — they're built into how we run our organization. And that's why we implemented usage of the Clear Drop Soft Plastic Compactor in our day to day operations."— Dr. Charles Rolsky, Executive Director & Lead Research Scientist, Shaw Institute Like they have at the Shaw Institute, when implemented correctly, commercial recycling programs deliver clear, quantifiable returns: The Shaw Institute achieved 94% diversion of laboratory-generated soft plastic waste using dedicated compaction technology. Read the full Shaw Institute case study. An office of 120 employees reduced landfill hauling frequency by 68% within four months. In specialized sectors — tech, professional services, consumer goods, life sciences — where competition for talent is fierce and candidates have leverage, sustainability credentials are rapidly becoming a baseline expectation rather than a differentiator. Organizations that get ahead of this now will be better positioned than those who treat it as optional. The Business Case Beyond Talent While the culture and talent story is compelling on its own, ZeroTrash initiatives also generate hard business value that strengthens the ROI case for leadership: Operational cost savings. Waste management for businesses is not cheap. Diverting materials from general waste streams — particularly through composting and soft plastic programs — directly reduces hauling volumes and the associated costs. Many organizations that commit to zero-to-landfill targets find they recover a meaningful portion of program costs through waste reduction alone. Supply chain and vendor alignment. As corporate procurement increasingly screens for ESG credentials, having a documented ZeroTrash program positions your company favorably with customers and partners who have their own sustainability commitments to meet. Risk mitigation. Regulatory pressure around waste, packaging, and carbon emissions is tightening across industries and geographies. Organizations that build commercial recycling and waste diversion practices now are ahead of compliance requirements that are likely coming regardless. Brand and reputation. Employees talk. So do clients, investors, and the communities where you operate. A ZeroTrash commitment — particularly one that reaches zero-to-landfill milestones — generates the kind of authentic storytelling that earned media and manufactured marketing cannot replicate. And the halo effect extends beyond the workforce: sustainability credentials are increasingly influencing customer purchasing decisions too. (We explore this in depth in our next post — "How Sustainable Practices Help Attract and Retain Business Customers & Partners.") Getting Started: 6 Steps to Creating ZeroTrash Adoption The most common barrier to ZeroTrash adoption isn't will — it's knowing where to begin. The good news is that most successful waste reduction strategies start smaller than organizations expect and build momentum from there. 1. Launch with People, Not Just Policy. A zero waste  program that arrives as a memo and without a champion(s) to lead it will underperform. The infrastructure matters, but so does the human activation layer around it.  2. Audit First. Understand what you're generating before trying to divert it. A waste audit — even an informal one — will quickly reveal which materials represent your highest-volume, highest-impact streams. For most commercial operations, that's food waste, soft plastics, and corrugated cardboard. 3. Build the Infrastructure. The right bins, placed in the right locations, with clear labeling and employee education, are the backbone of any ZeroTrash program. This sounds basic because it is — and it's also where most programs succeed or fail. Contaminated waste streams undermine diversion rates and increase costs. 4. Partner Strategically. Soft plastic diversion in particular requires the right processing partner. Not all waste haulers can handle film plastics. Finding a partner with the appropriate downstream relationships is critical to actually achieving landfill diversion rather than just collecting materials with nowhere to send them. 5. Measure and Track Results. Track diversion rates from the start. Set goals. Share results with employees. Celebrate milestones. The data is what turns a sustainability initiative into a cultural moment — and what gives your recruiting team something to talk about. 6. Evolve Toward Zero. ZeroTrash is a trajectory, not a switch. Organizations that treat it as a continuous improvement program — reducing landfill waste quarter over quarter — build more durable programs and more authentic sustainability narratives than those chasing a one-time certification. Download an infographic version of this guide. Build A Culture Worth Belonging To The companies winning the war for talent in the next decade will not be the ones with the flashiest perks or the most competitive salaries alone. They'll be the ones that have built cultures worth belonging to — cultures where organizational values are visible in daily operations, not just annual reports. ZeroTrash initiatives represent exactly that kind of operational values expression. They reduce waste. They reduce costs. They signal commitment to the employees you're trying to retain and the candidates you're trying to attract. And they give everyone in the organization something real to participate in together. That's not a facilities initiative. That's a talent strategy. Interested in implementing a ZeroTrash program at your organization? The right partner can help you audit your current waste streams, design the right diversion infrastructure, and connect you with processing networks for even the most challenging materials — including soft plastics. The journey to zero starts with knowing where you are.

UCSF Health's Mission Bay Hospital Achieves Guaranteed Recycling of Pharmacy Soft Plastic Waste with Clear Drop SPC

UCSF Health's Mission Bay Hospital Achieves Gua...

Frank DeMartin

Healthcare facilities generate massive amounts of plastic waste daily, and California's ambitious sustainability goals are pushing institutions to find innovative solutions. UCSF Health partnered with Clear Drop to pilot the...

February 12, 2026 Frank DeMartin

UCSF Health's Mission Bay Hospital Achieves Guaranteed Recycling of Pharmacy Soft Plastic Waste with Clear Drop SPC

Healthcare facilities generate massive amounts of plastic waste daily, and California's ambitious sustainability goals are pushing institutions to find innovative solutions. UCSF Health partnered with Clear Drop to pilot the Soft Plastic Compactor (SPC) at their Mission Bay hospital pharmacy, testing whether clear medication bags—a persistent waste stream with no traditional recycling pathway—could be successfully diverted from landfills.   UCSF Health operates Mission Bay Hospital, a premier academic medical center in San Francisco, recognized for excellence in specialized patient care and medical innovation. As California leads the nation in environmental policy with a goal to achieve 75% waste diversion by 2025, UCSF Health has embraced sustainability as a core institutional value. UCSF Health's sustainability team launched a 90-day pilot program to evaluate whether the Clear Drop SPC could turn a problematic waste stream into measurable environmental progress. The Challenge UCSF Mission Bay's pharmacy handles complex medication protocols for hospital patients, resulting in hundreds of clear plastic medication bags being discarded daily, with zero recycling infrastructure available. Pain Points Driving the Pilot: Volume without solutions: Several hundred clear med bags discarded daily with no recycling pathway California compliance pressure: State guidelines encouraging measurable waste diversion progress Staff frustration: Pharmacy team wanted to participate in sustainability but had no viable option for soft plastic Pilot Objectives Validate the real-world feasibility of the SPC in demanding clinical workflows Measure actual diversion to project annual impact Identify workflow friction points Capture user experience and staff satisfaction Soft Plastic Compactor Solution What Gets Processed The SPC at Mission Bay processed clear medication bags plus limited quantities of bubble wrap and plastic packaging from pharmaceutical supply deliveries. Through heat and compression, the SPC transforms bulky plastic into dense blocks that ship efficiently to Clear Drop's recycling partners. Placement and Users The SPC was installed directly within the Mission Bay pharmacy, ensuring pharmacy technicians could access it without disrupting medication preparation workflows. This convenient placement proved critical to staff adoption. Workflow Development Through the 90-day pilot, the Mission Bay team refined their process: Collection: Staff placed emptied medication bags in a designated collection bin within the pharmacy workspace. Loading: Team members fed collected plastic into the SPC unit throughout the day. Processing: The SPC ran its automatic compression cycle (~20 minutes compaction, ~40-60 minutes cooling). Block Removal: Once cooled, staff removed completed blocks and placed them in Clear Drop-provided shipping bags. Operational Discoveries The Hand-Feeding Advantage Early in the pilot, staff experimented with bulk loading, which interrupted workflow and sometimes produced blocks with inconsistent density. The team discovered that hand-feeding plastic produced consistently dense, well-formed blocks. This became standard practice and was ultimately integrated efficiently within the team’s workflow. The Cooling Cycle Challenge When blocks were forming, staff occasionally defaulted to throwing plastic in the trash. The team identified that assigning a dedicated staff member to remove completed blocks immediately would free up the SPC faster and prevent trash diversion during busy periods. "Staff liked using it, felt good saving soft plastic and saving the earth."— Jennifer Chu, CPhT, Pharmacy Operations Technician Supervisor, UCSF Health Results: 90 Days of Diversion The Mission Bay pilot delivered quantifiable environmental impact: Total blocks produced: 90 blocks, ~1 block per day Total plastic diverted: 372 pounds Projected annual diversion: 1,526 pounds (0.76 tons) per year from one pharmacy Room for Growth The Mission Bay team noted that actual diversion could climb higher with process refinement. Implementing dedicated block removal could capture more material and increase throughput during peak waste generation periods. "We could generate more blocks by assigning someone to remove the block once it is done."— Isabel Navarrete, Sustainability Analyst, UCSF Health Key Findings and Path Forward The 90-day Mission Bay pilot proved that hospital pharmacies can successfully divert soft plastic waste at scale while maintaining clinical operations. What Worked: Staff buy-in: Pharmacy team sustained positive engagement across 90 days Measurable impact: 372 pounds diverted provides concrete data for California sustainability reporting Process learning: Hand-feeding identified as optimal technique for block quality Continued commitment: Mission Bay pharmacy expressed interest in continuing SPC use beyond the pilot Strategic Value for UCSF Health: Rolling out SPCs across UCSF Health's pharmacy network could divert multiple tons of soft plastic annually, directly supporting California's waste reduction mandates. The Mission Bay pilot provides the operational blueprint: Deploy SPCs in pharmacies across UCSF Medical Centers Apply operational best practices from day one Expand beyond central pharmacies to satellite medication areas Share learnings with other California healthcare systems Looking Ahead UCSF Mission Bay's successful pilot establishes them as a California healthcare sustainability leader. The pharmacy team's enthusiasm for continuing SPC use—paired with measurable results and optimization opportunities—demonstrates that this solution delivers both environmental benefits and staff satisfaction. The insights gained provide a proven roadmap for expanding soft plastic recycling across UCSF Health's hospital network, helping California's premier academic medical center meet aggressive state waste diversion goals while transforming a persistent waste stream into environmental progress—one med bag at a time. Bring Medical Plastic Recycling to Your Healthcare Facility Clear Drop® partners with hospitals and healthcare systems to reduce soft plastic waste with measurable results. Contact our team UCSF Health continues to evaluate expansion opportunities across its hospital network as part of its ongoing commitment to environmental stewardship and California's sustainability leadership.  

AI technology and recycling symbol representing smart waste sorting and sustainable plastic recycling

How ZeroTrash® AI Helps You Identify Soft Plast...

Alena Hileuskaya

ZeroTrash® AI is designed to take the guesswork out of everyday waste decisions. Using a camera-based interface, the app analyzes packaging to help you determine whether an item is a...

January 22, 2026 Alena Hileuskaya

How ZeroTrash® AI Helps You Identify Soft Plastics Correctly

ZeroTrash® AI is designed to take the guesswork out of everyday waste decisions. Using a camera-based interface, the app analyzes packaging to help you determine whether an item is a soft plastic, fits accepted resin types, and is suitable for soft plastic compaction. Instead of relying on symbols or vague recycling rules, you can quickly figure out what an item is and how to properly discard it. Receiving this type of immediate, item-specific feedback can significantly improve trash sorting and reduce contamination in the recycling process. How much soft plastic do we end up throwing away by mistake? Probably much more than you think. Keep reading to learn how to properly sort your plastics and keep them out of landfills. 15 Common Soft Plastics People Throw Away by Mistake Below are some of the most commonly mis-sorted soft plastic items found in household waste streams. 1. Chip Bags and Snack Wrappers Often assumed to be unrecyclable due to their shiny appearance, many snack wrappers contain layers of soft plastic that can be compacted when accepted by downstream processors. 2. Cheese and Deli Packaging Flexible cheese sleeves and deli wrap films are frequently discarded, even though they belong in the soft plastic category once emptied and cleaned. 3. Frozen Food Bags Frozen vegetable and fruit bags are a major source of soft plastic waste and are commonly thrown away because they look “too thick” to recycle. 4. Bread Bags One of the most recyclable soft plastic items, bread bags are still among the most frequently trashed. 5. Produce Bags Lightweight produce bags are often forgotten or knotted and discarded, despite being a core soft plastic. 6. Cereal Box Liners The plastic liners inside cereal boxes are rarely recognized as recyclable soft plastics. 7. Takeout and Delivery Packaging From inner wraps to plastic liners inside delivery bags, many of these materials are soft plastics hidden in plain sight. 8. Bubble Wrap Often reused, but just as often trashed, bubble wrap is a recyclable soft plastic when properly compacted. 9. Plastic Film from Paper Products The plastic wrap around paper towels, toilet paper, and tissues is a common soft plastic item people overlook. 10. Dry Cleaning Bags Large, thin plastic films from dry cleaning are frequently misidentified and discarded. 11. Pet Food Bags Many pet food bags include soft plastic layers that people assume are non-recyclable. 12. Plastic Overwrap from Multipacks Shrink-style overwraps around multi-item products are rarely sorted correctly. 13. Shrink Wrap Clear or tinted shrink films are widely used in retail packaging and commonly trashed. 14. Packaging from Online Orders Mailer liners, air pillows, and inner plastic films from packaging add up quickly. 15. Soft Plastic Pouches Stand-up pouches and refill packs are increasingly common and often thrown away due to their shape and structure. Why Proper Sorting and Compaction Matter for Recycling Soft plastics are lightweight and easily contaminated. When incorrectly sorted, they can jam recycling equipment, lower material recovery rates, and increase processing costs. According to research from materials recovery organizations, pre-sorted, compacted soft plastics have a significantly higher chance of being successfully recycled into secondary products. Correct sorting at the household level directly improves the economics and feasibility of recycling downstream. Environmental Impact of Correct Soft Plastic Recycling at Home Soft plastics that are handled correctly can reduce landfill volume, decrease plastic leakage into ecosystems, and lower the demand for virgin plastic production. One of the most immediate ways you can reduce your plastic footprint is by improving your household’s plastic collection, especially for flexible packaging. Small, consistent actions at home scale into meaningful environmental outcomes. So, how can you ensure your plastic gets recycled properly? First, scan the item using ZeroTrash® AI, then add it to your Clear Drop Soft Plastic Compactor (SPC). How To Get Started With ZeroTrash® AI and the Soft Plastic Compactor (SPC) Getting started is intentionally simple. Use ZeroTrash® AI to scan everyday packaging, and follow the app’s guidance for sorting. Once an item is identified as a suitable soft plastic, the next step is proper preparation. What the SPC helps households do Compress soft plastics into dense, manageable forms Reduce storage volume Keep materials clean and consolidated Prepare plastics for real recycling pathways Compaction is critical because loose soft plastics are difficult to handle, transport, and process at scale. Together, ZeroTrash® AI and the SPC form a practical system for reducing soft plastic waste confusion at home. Making Soft Plastic Recycling Simple and Clear Soft plastic recycling doesn’t fail because people don’t care — it’s because the system is too often unclear. By combining clear identification (ZeroTrash® AI) with practical preparation (SPC), you can finally make informed decisions without memorizing rules or second-guessing every package. The result is not about perfection but making real, tangible progress.

Clear Drop team discussing practical household waste solutions at CES 2026 exhibition

Why CES 2026 Shifted the Conversation Around Ho...

Alena Hileuskaya

CES has always been a place for bold ideas and ambitious visions. But this year, we noticed a subtle yet important change in how household waste was discussed. The conversations...

January 20, 2026 Alena Hileuskaya

Why CES 2026 Shifted the Conversation Around Household Waste

CES has always been a place for bold ideas and ambitious visions. But this year, we noticed a subtle yet important change in how household waste was discussed. The conversations were no longer centered on experimental prototypes or distant sustainability promises. Instead, they focused on complete, workable systems that could realistically fit into daily life. The questions were practical and specific: How does this work at home? What happens next? Where does the material actually go? We at Clear Drop experienced this shift directly through in-depth discussions at our booth and across meetings. People were both curious and  analytical. They wanted to understand the full path, from a decision made in the kitchen to a verified recycling or composting outcome.  To us, it felt like the beginnings of a quiet yet powerful turning point, where household waste management stops being treated as an abstract challenge and starts actually being addressed with  integrated, solvable systems. Recognition at CES 2026: Why It Matters At CES 2026, Clear Drop received two notable recognitions: Best of CES 2026 — Sustainability Best in Show 2026 — The Kitch These acknowledgments reflect growing industry recognition that soft plastic waste is a serious, unresolved challenge, and that addressing it requires complete systems rather than isolated efforts.  This recognition helps shift the attention toward practical, household-level solutions that can scale. Media Interest and Industry Conversations Coverage from outlets including CNET, Engadget, Lifehacker, Mashable, Morning Brew, Plastics News, Waste360, housedigest, the kitchn and others focused less on novelty and innovation and more on feasibility and reliability. Conversations centered on real-world implementation, scalability, costs, verification, and ensuring that materials don’t end up in landfills. What the Market Is Finally Ready To Acknowledge Soft plastic waste has long existed in a gray zone of recycling. Grocery bags, wrappers, films, and flexible packaging often fall outside curbside programs, clog sorting equipment, or get rejected entirely. While collection efforts exist on paper, end-to-end processing rarely follows through in practice. This gap is often framed as a user problem: People are confused or choose to simply not participate Now, however, more people are recognizing that this issue is structural, not behavioral.  Consumer fatigue with vague green messaging has accelerated this realization. People are increasingly skeptical of initiatives that rely on perfect sorting behavior or municipal overhauls that may never come. The market is now ready for solutions that close the loop — systems that work within real household constraints and deliver reliable outcomes without requiring constant effort or guesswork. From Promises to Systems: What Resonated Most at CES It wasn’t any single piece of technology that stood out most at CES 2026, but the interest in systems that removed uncertainty. People gravitated toward solutions that provided clarity across the entire мwaste management process, from identifying what to throw out where, how to sort it all at home, and how to ensure that materials would be processed and recycled as intended.  This end-to-end logic directly addresses what many experience as “guessing fatigue” — the frustration of never being quite sure whether something is recyclable, compostable, or destined for the landfill. When the flow is transparent and verifiable, people start to feel like their efforts are no longer just aspirational, but actually making a difference. The best part is, when the system is simplified and streamlined, those efforts don’t require any extra work. A Complete Household Waste System in Practice Clear Drop’s system is designed around how people actually interact with waste at home. It consists of three interconnected components that work together to simplify decisions, reduce friction, and enable real recycling and composting outcomes. ZeroTrash® AI: Offering clarity at the first decision point Sorting decisions usually happen in seconds, often under uncertainty. ZeroTrash® AI helps users identify the material they’re discarding and how it should be handled. You simply scan the packaging to learn how to dispose of it properly.  With ZeroTrash® AI, you can remove ambiguity, reduce mental load, and prevent errors before they happen. Soft Plastic Compactor (SPC): Making recycling physically possible Soft plastics are lightweight but voluminous, making them difficult to store and transport. The Soft Plastic Compactor (SPC) addresses this obstacle by compressing bags, wrappers, and films into dense, uniform bricks using controlled heat and pressure. A month’s worth of household soft plastic waste can be reduced to a compact block about the size of a shoebox. This process dramatically reduces volume, eliminates mess and odors, and prepares materials in a form that verified recycling partners can actually process. The SPC is designed for everyday household use and is already being adopted by small businesses that are turning an unmanageable waste stream into a stable, shippable resource. Organics Collector (OC): Separating food waste cleanly Food waste presents its own challenges, including odors, pests, and hygiene concerns. The Organics Collector (OC) enables clean, consistent separation of food scraps, keeping organics out of the general trash stream. By controlling smells and leaks, it removes one of the biggest psychological barriers to daily composting and supports cleaner downstream processing. Together, these components form a user-centered loop that involves clear identification and effective preparation to achieve verifiable results. CES in Context: A Broader Industry Shift Several CES sessions reinforced this direction. In discussions led by Corie Barry (CEO of Best Buy) and Michael Kassan (CEO of 3C Ventures), a clear theme emerged: Modern systems are no longer about transactions or channels, but long-term relationships built on trust. In this model, technology works best when it fades into the background,  quietly enabling confidence, consistency, and ease.  This philosophy closely aligns with Clear Drop’s approach to waste. We believe in building infrastructure that supports daily habits without demanding constant attention or heroic effort. What This Signals for the Future of Circular Living Circular living shouldn’t solely rely on individual discipline. As CES 2026 made clear, the future lies in systems that handle complexity behind the scenes, reduce decision fatigue, and support people where they already are.  When tools are designed around real behavior and frustrations — such as time constraints, uncertainty, and limited attention — sustainable habits become repeatable rather than exceptional. Real change comes with consistency. Moving Forward Without the Hype CES 2026 marked a meaningful milestone for us at Clear Drop, but it’s hardly an endpoint. The work ahead — learning from our users, refining our products, and scaling what already works — will be subtler but just as meaningful. Clear Drop will continue to focus on workable systems that actually follow through on their promises. The conversation around household waste is evolving — and so are the tools that support it. Now we keep going. Thank you for being a part of our journey.  

How the Shaw Institute Successfully Started to Recycle Laboratory Soft Plastic Waste for the First Time with SPC

How the Shaw Institute Successfully Started to ...

Alena Hileuskaya

The Shaw Institute in Blue Hill, Maine, is a respected nonprofit research organization studying the impact of contaminants, including PFAS chemicals and microplastics — on human and environmental health. Their...

November 27, 2025 Alena Hileuskaya

How the Shaw Institute Successfully Started to Recycle Laboratory Soft Plastic Waste for the First Time with SPC

The Shaw Institute in Blue Hill, Maine, is a respected nonprofit research organization studying the impact of contaminants, including PFAS chemicals and microplastics — on human and environmental health. Their work is regularly published in leading scientific journals and covered by international media. The institute also operates an Environmental Education Center (EEC) featuring aquariums, marine mammal skeletons, and hands-on ocean exploration exhibits. Like most laboratories, the Shaw Institute generates significant quantities of clean polyethylene (PE) and polypropylene (PP) soft plastic waste from daily research operations — including packaging from lab tools, sampling supplies, and delivery materials. According to the U.S. EPA, most municipal programs do not accept soft plastics, meaning nearly all of this material historically went to landfills. To address this challenge, the Shaw Institute became one of the first research laboratories in the U.S. to pilot the Clear Drop Soft Plastic Compactor (SPC) — an on-site, lab-friendly solution designed specifically for soft plastic recycling. UNEP research highlights how important innovations like this are for managing flexible plastics responsibly. Why the Shaw Institute Chose the Clear Drop SPC Before implementing the SPC, staff had no practical way to recycle common laboratory soft plastics, including: polyethylene baggies and protective films bubble wrap and cushioning packaging sterile wrap and supply pouches other clean PE and PP packaging from lab operations “We were looking for proven technology that could help us deal with the soft plastic problem in our lab and beyond,” explains Dr. Charlie Rolsky, Executive Director and Lead Research Scientist. “We're excited to pilot Clear Drop’s SPC device as part of our 2025 internal sustainability efforts. It offers a much-needed solution for improving our ability to recycle the soft plastic waste generated by our lab work.”   The Clear Drop SPC was selected because it: compresses clean soft plastics into dense, stackable blocks ready for certified recyclers requires minimal space and no heat or chemicals works precisely with PE and PP waste produced in labs supports the institute’s mission to reduce plastic pollution and “practice what they preach” A detailed technical explanation of the device’s operation is available here. Implementation and First-Month Results The SPC was installed directly inside the laboratory — the primary source of soft plastic waste. Staff received training on cleaning, sorting, and feeding materials into the compactor. The installation required no facility modifications and integrated smoothly into daily workflows. In the first month alone: 6 dense blocks of clean soft plastic waste were compacted and prepared for recycling 5 staff members plus several volunteers became regular SPC users The device operated safely and consistently in an active research environment The SPC quickly became an effective tool for reducing landfill-bound laboratory plastics and improving internal sustainability practices. Expansion Beyond the Lab Although the initial goal was laboratory waste reduction, the pilot expanded naturally as staff recognized the device’s capabilities: Soft plastics from the Environmental Education Center (EEC) are now collected and processed Employees began bringing clean PE/PP soft plastics from home Once per week, the SPC is moved to a public EEC exhibit, where visitors can observe the compression process and learn about soft plastic circularity This turned the SPC into both a practical waste-management device and a hands-on educational resource, supporting the institute’s public outreach mission. Early Community Interest (Next-Phase Potential) Building on the success of the internal pilot, the Shaw Institute is now exploring the idea of serving as a temporary community drop-off point where local residents can bring clean soft plastics for guaranteed recycling. While still in planning, this potential expansion aligns naturally with visitor engagement and mirrors other pilot models implemented by Clear Drop. Key Benefits Realized by the Shaw Institute First-ever ability to recycle laboratory soft plastic waste on-site Significant progress toward near-zero-waste lab and facility operations Strong alignment between the institute’s research mission and daily sustainability practices A new educational tool demonstrating real-world soft plastic recycling Proven, low-maintenance technology suitable for research organizations of any size The Shaw Institute pilot demonstrates that even small scientific institutions can successfully implement soft plastic recycling programs with the right equipment. For laboratories seeking a reliable, lab-safe, ready-to-deploy solution, the Clear Drop SPC offers measurable results and immediate environmental impact. Explore the SPC here.