Displaying 1 - 14 of 14
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3D printing isn't always green, but with the right materials it can reduce waste and energy use.
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Despite opposition, CS found a healthy market demanding safer and transparent products.
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McDonald's and Starbucks stand out at leading examples of what fast food companies should do to lower the impacts of their packaging.
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Strips that absorb the gas that accelerates fruit ripening are being tested by Marks & Spencer and Tesco in the hopes of slashing food and packaging waste.
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Article
Clorox's green brands aren't giving it the profit boosts they used to.
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Sprint is upping the bar on green phones, and lowering their costs, with the latest phone in its environmental line.
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Article
When Patagonia developed a boot for Backpacker magazine's Zero Impact Challenge, a call for boots with the lowest environmental impacts, it found that opinions vary widely on what materials are better choices.
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Article
Cell phone makers are getting a standard to determine how sustainable their products are.
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Charging phones in the E.U. is set to become easier and less wasteful with new standards for universal charger-compatible phones.
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Now that Patagonia is close to offering recycling for all of its clothing, it's taking a new approach to bringing sustainability to apparel: Asking customers to wear less and repair more.
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Preserve collected 50 tons of waste polypropylene plastic this year though its Gimme 5 recycling program for plastic that it turns into new bath and home products.
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Article
In the mid-2000s, when interest in eco-friendly apparel was increasing and most greener brands sold for a premium, Anvil Knitwear saw something missing from the marketplace: A more affordable range of organic and recycled shirts that came in more than just earth tones.
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In the latest challenge posed by the editors of Backpacker Magazine to equipment manufacturers, five companies are bringing all their innovations to bear to make hiking boots that tread gently on the planet.
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Article
The newly-launched HealthyStuff.org lists what chemicals like lead, mercury and PVC are found in more than 900 products, including children's school supplies, purses, car seats, automobiles and pet toys.