A Bury toy manufacturer has joined a scheme to promote recycling and reduce waste in schools.
Sambro International, based on Dumers Lane, has become the most recent toy company to join the Recycle to Read programme after partnering with two sustainability organisations, Wastebuster and Products of Change.
The Recycle to Read initiative works with organisations and schools across the UK to facilitate the recycling and the re-use of toys, small electrical items, and textiles.
Participating schools and communities are then rewarded with books and reading resources to support children’s literacy.
The programme unlocks the value of collaboration between organisations and provides an industry-wide infrastructure solution for recycling all broken, hard plastic toys that consumers can engage with easily.
Collected plastic toys are sent to a specialised recycling plant, separated into specific plastic types and turned into pellet form, ready to be recycled into new products, such as construction boards, outdoor furniture, or playground equipment.
Schools are encouraged to hold toy swap shop events to recirculate or sell toys suitable for reuse, and to take any toys not sold or given away to charities.
By partnering with Wastebuster, the environmental education company that founded the scheme, Sambro is helping scale it into further sites, allowing it to reach, and educate more children.
They have even set up Wastebuster bins in their own office, to collect broken samples dismantled for testing purposes.
As part of Sambro’s own sustainability strategy it is focusing on education and awareness among consumers about recycling and ensuring customers are armed with the right information to make informed purchasing and recycling decisions.
The company is adding QR codes to packaging which directs consumers to a dedicated web page with details about what materials can be recycled and how best to do so.
Changes are being made to packaging, with plastic elements being removed where possible, and FSC card being introduced, and snipes detailing these changes are being added to front of pack.
Lisa Longley, ethical and sustainability manager at Sambro said: “Sustainability is a key focus for the toy industry which has traditionally been a heavy user of plastics.
“Retailers and brands need to work together to ensure it’s top of the agenda and wherever possible, we replace or support innovative solutions to re-use.
“We need to ensure we are effectively communicating with, and educating consumers on how to make more sustainable buying choices.
“At Sambro we fully support the circular economy and we’re excited to be a part of the Recycle to Read scheme.”
More than 30 companies, including Sambro have joined the Recycle to Read campaign, with 120 local authorities expressing an interest in supporting local community engagements.
Katy Newnham, founder of Wastebuster, said: “There is no time like now to change the future of the toy industry. Acting as a responsible business is no longer a ‘nice to have’, it is a commercial necessity and environmental imperative.
“Never before has it been more important to give children the tools and mindset to work towards a more sustainable future.
“By working together, we can turn the dial for a whole generation, to promote and enable responsible consumption and production.
"Let’s make this a good news story for the industry, for children and for the planet.”
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