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Sustainable packaging: Whole Foods Market teams with Cork ReHarvest

New program will recycle wine corks, aims to help save Mediterranean cork forests.

-- Packaging Digest, 4/7/2010 12:56:42 PM

Whole Foods Market announced a wine cork recycling program, making it easy for wine enthusiasts to properly dispose of corks. The first national retailer to launch a cork recycling program, Whole Foods Market will accept natural wine corks at all of its 292 stores in the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom.

Whole Foods Market is partnering with Cork ReHarvest to help collect and recycle some of the 13 billion natural corks that are produced each year.
 
"We often forget that cork is a renewable, recyclable material that does not belong in landfills," said Erez Klein, wine and beer buyer for Whole Foods Market's Pacific Northwest Region. "Whole Foods Market is excited to make cork recycling more accessible to our shoppers. Cork ReHarvest allows us to help sustain cork forests, a critically important resource for our planet, and to do so with near effortless local community action."

Mediterranean oak forests that supply cork support one of the world's highest levels of forest biodiversity and the second-highest number of plant species in the world. Not a single tree is cut down during cork extraction; instead, bark is hand-harvested every 9 to 12 years.

The program will result in virtually zero increase in carbon footprint. Corks make their entire journey from stores to recycling centers on trucks that already are en route to each destination.

"Through this recycling effort, Whole Foods Market is demonstrating its commitment to its green mission," said Patrick Spencer, director of Cork ReHarvest. "Cork ReHarvest is honored that, together with Whole Foods Market and our partner, Willamette Valley Vineyards, we have the opportunity to recycle this natural, renewable product, and to bring awareness to the environmental importance of the Mediterranean cork forests."

West of the Rockies, corks will be delivered to Western Pulp, where they will be turned into recyclable wine shippers containing 10 percent cork. In the Midwest, corks will be sent to Yemm & Hart, which produces cork floor tiles. And on the East Coast and in the UK, corks will be transported to Jelinek Cork Group, one of the oldest cork manufacturers in North America, where corks will be made into post-consumer products.

SOURCE: Whole Foods Market

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