Your Corporate Guide to Responsible Waste Management

So, your company wants to reduce its landfill waste. Now what? As sustainability reaches top of mind for investors and customers, more companies are beginning to tackle waste in their supply chains in order to boost their green cred. Once you get past recycling, the options can get quite confusing! While zero waste is an admirable target that surely makes headlines, there are plenty of actions you can take to make a big impact all along the waste diversion spectrum. In this editorial series in partnership with Covanta Environmental Solutions, we’ll explore steps your company can take to edge closer to zero waste targets. We’ll unpack all the tools in your toolbox — from source reduction and recycling to cleantech solutions like wastewater treatment — explain what they are and how they work, and teach you to use them in the best way possible.

Sponsored by Coventa.

Videos from this campaign

Content from this campaign

Environment

The Journey To Corporate Zero-Waste-To-Landfill

Environment

First Steps for Corporate Zero Waste

Environment

P&G and Microsoft Demonstrate How to Move Beyond Recycling

Supply Chain & the Circular Economy

Mutually Secured Destruction and the Circular Economy

Environment

Tactics of Diversion: Measuring and Reporting Zero Waste Targets
Waste implies squandered resources, be they time, money or materials. Managing money and time are core competencies of any successful business. But somehow, trash and garbage have gotten a free pass. Fortunately, that is changing. As companies embrace one form or other of “zero waste” commitments, the business case for efficient and sustainable resource flow management is catching on.
TriplePundit logo

More from TriplePundit

  1. Building More Sustainable Agricultural Supply Chains, Today and Into the Future
    More and more companies are looking to measure and mitigate the full scope of their greenhouse gas emissions in alignment with changing regulations...
  2. The ONE HOME, ONE PLANET U.S. Event Inspires Action for IKEA and Purpose-Driven Leaders
    IKEA brought leaders together to envision a better and more sustainable future at the ONE HOME, ONE PLANET U.S. event in March. The goal of the two...
  3. Force for Good: Giving Back to Communities Nationwide
    Stakeholders increasingly expect companies to be a positive force in the communities where their employees live and work — not just with philanthropic...
  4. Avocados: The Farm-to-Table Journey of America’s Favorite Fruit
    Americans love avocados, but most don’t know that more than 80 percent of the prized green fruits that arrive in the U.S. come from one place: Mexico...
  5. NYC: Leading Toward a Green Economy
    As a leader in sustainability, New York City is at the forefront of the green economy and tackling climate change, while working toward the city's...
  6. Decarbonizing the Maritime Industry
    In 2018, countries within the International Maritime Organization — the U.N. agency that regulates global shipping — pledged to reduce the carbon...
  7. Carbon and Beyond: The ESG and Sustainability Trends Shaping Business Today
    These days stakeholders are asking more and more about how environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors impact business, and companies are...
  8. Lead on Purpose: How Values Drive Business in Uncertain Times
    2020 was a turning point for many Americans. Now more than ever, consumers look to businesses to have a positive impact on society. In fact, 60...
  9. Doing the Work: What Does It Mean To Be a Just Company?
    More than 75 percent of Americans feel it is "deeply important that companies respond to racial injustice” in order to earn or keep their trust, and...
  10. Equalizing Care: Busting Disparities in the Healthcare System
    Gaps in equal access to effective healthcare have long been the norm in the U.S., but many weren’t aware of how bad the problem really was until the...